[00:00.000 --> 00:05.560] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.560 --> 00:09.560] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.560 --> 00:11.040] Our liberty depends on it. [00:11.040 --> 00:14.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.960 --> 00:17.080] your First Amendment rights. [00:17.080 --> 00:18.660] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.660 --> 00:22.260] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.260 --> 00:27.040] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.040 --> 00:28.480] So protect your rights. [00:28.480 --> 00:32.240] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.240 --> 00:33.240] Privacy. [00:33.240 --> 00:34.800] It's worth hanging on to. [00:34.800 --> 00:39.080] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.080 --> 00:42.640] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.640 --> 00:45.080] Start over with Startpage. [00:45.080 --> 00:46.680] Spar. [00:46.680 --> 00:47.920] It's what fighters do. [00:47.920 --> 00:50.960] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.960 --> 00:54.600] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.600 --> 01:01.720] Spar with an extra P, S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.720 --> 01:03.080] and R for religion. [01:03.080 --> 01:07.200] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.200 --> 01:08.680] assembly, and religion. [01:08.680 --> 01:11.000] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:11.000 --> 01:14.720] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.720 --> 01:18.240] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.240 --> 01:20.920] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.920 --> 01:22.880] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:22.880 --> 01:31.240] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.240 --> 01:34.920] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.920 --> 01:38.360] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.360 --> 01:39.840] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.840 --> 01:43.740] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.740 --> 01:46.880] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.880 --> 01:48.480] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.480 --> 01:52.080] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52.080 --> 01:56.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.840 --> 02:01.880] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.880 --> 02:04.600] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.600 --> 02:08.880] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.880 --> 02:12.440] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.440 --> 02:14.520] Start over with StartPage. [02:14.520 --> 02:20.360] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.360 --> 02:22.440] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.440 --> 02:26.920] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.920 --> 02:30.800] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.800 --> 02:31.800] Get it? [02:31.800 --> 02:34.080] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:34.080 --> 02:37.680] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.680 --> 02:38.680] when he said, [02:38.680 --> 02:43.840] "...the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [02:43.840 --> 02:48.960] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which historically [02:48.960 --> 02:50.720] has proved to always be possible." [02:50.720 --> 02:52.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.600 --> 03:21.440] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:23.600 --> 03:49.600] the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [03:49.600 --> 04:07.440] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [04:07.440 --> 04:33.680] now appears remote in America, but which now appears remote in America, but which now [04:33.680 --> 04:59.920] appears remote in America, but which now appears remote in America, but which now [04:59.920 --> 05:23.240] appears remote in America, but which now appears remote in America, but which now appears [05:23.240 --> 05:27.320] It's actually getting more fun than I expected. [05:27.320 --> 05:31.320] I started out researching law a long time ago when I realized something was horribly [05:31.320 --> 05:41.280] wrong, about 40 years ago, and it took me a long time to figure out what was wrong. [05:41.280 --> 05:44.600] And I figured out that they're doing everything wrong. [05:44.600 --> 05:52.880] And then I've spent about 20 years now trying to implement a fix. [05:52.880 --> 05:59.620] I thought when I started out that all I had to do is go to these public officials and [05:59.620 --> 06:07.120] show them how what they were doing was wrong and they would fix it. [06:07.120 --> 06:13.760] I was younger in those days and I was naive. [06:13.760 --> 06:22.040] And it's not that they weren't well-meaning and well-intended public officials. [06:22.040 --> 06:29.040] It's like what Mark Autry, the justice of the peace and a personal friend. [06:29.040 --> 06:34.320] He was a Baptist preacher, but I won't hold that against him. [06:34.320 --> 06:38.120] When I went through this with him, he said, are you telling me that everything I've did [06:38.120 --> 06:45.600] for 20 years as a sheriff's deputy and then another 12 years as a justice of the peace [06:45.600 --> 06:54.960] was wrong, that everything everybody in Texas is doing is wrong and you're right? [06:54.960 --> 06:55.960] Don't ask me, Mark. [06:55.960 --> 06:56.960] I didn't write the code. [06:56.960 --> 06:57.960] I just read it. [06:57.960 --> 06:59.180] Here it is. [06:59.180 --> 07:05.320] He could not wrap his head around the idea that everybody's doing it wrong. [07:05.320 --> 07:09.000] My son-in-law got elected as a JP. [07:09.000 --> 07:14.440] I went through the code with it, showed him exactly how it's supposed to work. [07:14.440 --> 07:19.040] He went to training and they trained him to do it different. [07:19.040 --> 07:25.680] So after seeing the code, seeing what it actually said, and then go into this training and there [07:25.680 --> 07:31.080] at odds with one another, which one do you expect he did? [07:31.080 --> 07:36.620] You would think that having talked to you first, he would raise a lot of poignant questions [07:36.620 --> 07:39.560] in the training. [07:39.560 --> 07:43.120] I kind of suspect he didn't raise any questions. [07:43.120 --> 07:50.640] I suspect he went to a lot of trouble to make sure nobody knew who he was. [07:50.640 --> 07:57.480] Mark Autry, when he went down to training one time, I came by to see him and he said [07:57.480 --> 08:03.880] he was down at training at Austin and when they found out he was from Boyd, they couldn't [08:03.880 --> 08:04.880] talk about anything else. [08:04.880 --> 08:09.320] They just wanted to know if I knew you, wanted to talk about you. [08:09.320 --> 08:14.160] This was 10, 15 years ago. [08:14.160 --> 08:20.800] So I've been hammering them for a long time and it's not just the bad guys. [08:20.800 --> 08:24.280] They're stuck in a system they didn't create. [08:24.280 --> 08:32.920] They feel as though they're subject to the powers that be and they follow the training. [08:32.920 --> 08:35.360] So how do we fix this? [08:35.360 --> 08:45.680] Well, we fix this by remembering that first we are the ultimate check to the balance of [08:45.680 --> 08:46.680] power. [08:46.680 --> 08:52.600] Yeah, somebody was talking today about in Pennsylvania, they've got the king's bench [08:52.600 --> 08:57.320] and they had a prosecutor trying to say, that's the way it is with the king. [08:57.320 --> 09:02.960] And as you're talking, it makes me think, yeah, somebody needs to show him who the king [09:02.960 --> 09:03.960] is. [09:03.960 --> 09:13.680] We have a different king than England had, a different king than Canada follows. [09:13.680 --> 09:19.960] We are the kings and if there's a problem in the system, it's our problem. [09:19.960 --> 09:22.000] It's not that these public officials are bad guys. [09:22.000 --> 09:29.240] These public officials are just the way public officials have always been since there has [09:29.240 --> 09:34.660] been history of public officials. [09:34.660 --> 09:41.440] Human beings have been human beings this whole time. [09:41.440 --> 09:45.840] These guys didn't come up with corruption. [09:45.840 --> 09:56.320] They didn't come up with this need to be a part of a group and with this genetic compulsion [09:56.320 --> 09:58.360] to fit in with the crowd. [09:58.360 --> 10:11.120] It's in our nature and while it is what binds us together in functional groups, sometimes [10:11.120 --> 10:15.040] it binds us to the wrong groups. [10:15.040 --> 10:24.280] As complex and as functional as we are, we screw up, we make mistakes and our founders [10:24.280 --> 10:36.600] put together a republic that had a design in it to handle that and we were that design. [10:36.600 --> 10:42.680] So if you think your government's not working right and you don't have anybody to complain [10:42.680 --> 10:51.480] to, the buck stops here with you and with me. [10:51.480 --> 10:58.240] Okay, with that said, I know that sounds a little sanctimonious and self-righteous and [10:58.240 --> 11:03.380] all that, but there's something else about it. [11:03.380 --> 11:08.720] One thing most people don't realize is they look at taking on the system and you hear [11:08.720 --> 11:16.000] these adages, you can't fight city hall, you've got to watch out, they'll get you and all [11:16.000 --> 11:20.040] this horse manure. [11:20.040 --> 11:31.480] The one thing that I kind of figured out taking these guys on is it is so much fun. [11:31.480 --> 11:32.720] We miss that part. [11:32.720 --> 11:40.660] They do everything they can to terrify us of the system because they don't want us taking [11:40.660 --> 11:41.660] them on. [11:41.660 --> 11:47.240] For the most part, these guys that are working in the system know the system screwed up, [11:47.240 --> 11:49.880] but they're stuck inside it, they can't fix it. [11:49.880 --> 11:56.920] They don't want us to know what they know because somehow they feel like they will be [11:56.920 --> 12:04.120] more vulnerable and they are right. [12:04.120 --> 12:09.160] Because once you figure out that the system is screwed up, the first thing you do is you [12:09.160 --> 12:15.240] get frustrated and intimidated and frightened and you feel like the world's closing in on [12:15.240 --> 12:16.960] you and there's nothing you can do about it. [12:16.960 --> 12:25.720] I need you to dig a little deeper and you start figuring out you really are the ultimate [12:25.720 --> 12:28.360] check to the balance of power. [12:28.360 --> 12:31.260] You are the one who can fix this. [12:31.260 --> 12:35.400] You are the one to whom everybody answers. [12:35.400 --> 12:44.400] Right now, I have all of the highest judges in Texas wondering if I'm going to bankrupt [12:44.400 --> 12:49.640] them or not, personally. [12:49.640 --> 13:00.680] And I'm just one guy, an old disgruntled retired vet living on Social Security. [13:00.680 --> 13:03.720] I'm nothing. [13:03.720 --> 13:10.040] I'm about as far down the political spectrum as you can get. [13:10.040 --> 13:16.920] But I've drug all these guys into court and I'm about to file a motion that's gonna give [13:16.920 --> 13:21.120] a map a plexi. [13:21.120 --> 13:27.080] Let's say you're on the Court of Criminal Appeals, highest criminal court in the state [13:27.080 --> 13:29.160] of Texas. [13:29.160 --> 13:38.760] You are the elite and you get some chump, pro se, come along and sue you for $20 million [13:38.760 --> 13:41.840] and sue you in your personal capacity. [13:41.840 --> 13:50.560] Well, I'm a big time judge and I have absolute immunity. [13:50.560 --> 13:56.680] So we go to the Attorney General, get him to write you an answer. [13:56.680 --> 14:04.120] And then this chump pro se files this response, their motion to strike your Rule 12 motion. [14:04.120 --> 14:07.120] They don't file an answer, they file a Rule 12 motion to dismiss. [14:07.120 --> 14:09.640] It's a standard procedure. [14:09.640 --> 14:14.520] And if you have an immunity issue, you must bring it in the Rule 12. [14:14.520 --> 14:23.400] It's right there in Rule 12, 12B1, I think, or 12B6 something. [14:23.400 --> 14:29.560] Anyway, it's one of the first ones under 12B6. [14:29.560 --> 14:33.520] That if you have an immunity issue, you have to bring it into 12B6. [14:33.520 --> 14:37.360] Okay, they brought immunity issues. [14:37.360 --> 14:45.120] Problem, sued him in the federal court for violating a federal law. [14:45.120 --> 14:49.640] I played them like cheap fiddles. [14:49.640 --> 14:56.320] I went in there and asked them to do things I knew they wouldn't do. [14:56.320 --> 14:59.960] On the show we talk about, run the routine on them. [14:59.960 --> 15:04.160] If you have a problem with public officials, run the routine on them. [15:04.160 --> 15:08.520] Go in there and ask them to do something they're not going to want to do. [15:08.520 --> 15:17.160] Never ever ask a public official to do anything that they are not commanded to do. [15:17.160 --> 15:20.640] And never ask them to do anything they actually want them to do. [15:20.640 --> 15:25.040] You go in there and ask them to do something and they refuse to do it. [15:25.040 --> 15:33.320] We got all these people that feel angry and frustrated and disenfranchised, disenfranchised. [15:33.320 --> 15:42.120] You feel disenfranchised because you are, if you go to a magistrate and give the magistrate [15:42.120 --> 15:48.640] notice that a public official over here was required to do a certain thing and you demanded [15:48.640 --> 15:53.960] that they do that thing and they didn't do that thing. [15:53.960 --> 15:57.840] You feel disenfranchised. [15:57.840 --> 16:09.080] And under Texas Constitution Article 1, Section 19, it says the public, among other things, [16:09.080 --> 16:14.760] the people shall in no way be disenfranchised. [16:14.760 --> 16:22.120] It's right there in the Constitution, a specific prohibition. [16:22.120 --> 16:25.800] So goody, goody, goody. [16:25.800 --> 16:29.640] What that does is give you a shot at them. [16:29.640 --> 16:35.720] In this case, I took a criminal complaint against the governor, I wrote this little [16:35.720 --> 16:44.160] criminal complaint against the governor over his mask and COVID restriction things. [16:44.160 --> 16:49.360] And I'll talk about it on the other side, how that went. [16:49.360 --> 16:52.560] The only thing about this was setting them up. [16:52.560 --> 16:56.840] And I'll explain it on the other side, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La Radio, we'll [16:56.840 --> 17:00.440] be right back. [17:00.440 --> 17:05.040] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [17:05.040 --> 17:09.240] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.240 --> 17:13.560] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [17:13.560 --> 17:14.560] can win too. [17:14.560 --> 17:19.360] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [17:19.360 --> 17:25.120] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, how to answer [17:25.120 --> 17:29.760] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [17:29.760 --> 17:33.960] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.960 --> 17:39.080] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:39.080 --> 17:41.200] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:41.200 --> 17:46.760] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [17:46.760 --> 17:49.600] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.600 --> 17:58.760] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [17:58.760 --> 18:01.640] collectors now. [18:01.640 --> 18:06.000] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [18:06.000 --> 18:07.000] Word? [18:07.000 --> 18:12.120] Tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture [18:12.120 --> 18:18.520] Talk where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [18:18.520 --> 18:23.040] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly [18:23.040 --> 18:25.440] dividing the word of truth. [18:25.440 --> 18:29.420] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark where we'll go verse [18:29.420 --> 18:32.720] by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [18:32.720 --> 18:37.400] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [18:37.400 --> 18:39.760] and Christian character development. [18:39.760 --> 18:44.280] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:44.280 --> 18:48.600] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [18:48.600 --> 18:50.880] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [18:50.880 --> 18:57.520] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [18:57.520 --> 19:12.960] motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [19:12.960 --> 19:31.120] Look what we've got, who we ask the Christian, wonder what they're hiding, they don't have [19:31.120 --> 19:32.120] the answers. [19:32.120 --> 19:33.120] Who we ask the Christian, look what we've got, and they don't have the answers. [19:33.120 --> 19:44.120] Who we ask the Christian, look what we've got, and they don't have the answers. [19:44.120 --> 20:09.120] Who we ask the Christian, look what we've got, and they don't have the answers. [20:09.120 --> 20:14.080] Okay, we are back, and we're ready to tell from Brett Founding, here at LogosRadio, and [20:14.080 --> 20:18.480] we're talking about how to actually fix the system. [20:18.480 --> 20:22.800] We're not gonna fix the system complaining about the system. [20:22.800 --> 20:30.320] We'll fix the system by taking them on, and we are, you and I, as individual citizens, [20:30.320 --> 20:34.160] we're the ones most capable of doing that. [20:34.160 --> 20:38.440] I'm just a chump, pro se, I'm nothing. [20:38.440 --> 20:45.000] In the overall scheme of things, and I'm able to bring all of these guys into the federal [20:45.000 --> 20:47.840] court. [20:47.840 --> 20:53.640] And you sit there and you look at all these public officials and they're cloaked in the [20:53.640 --> 21:00.960] trappings of their officialdom and their authority, and you get the impression that they have [21:00.960 --> 21:04.360] some kind of power. [21:04.360 --> 21:07.680] They don't have squat. [21:07.680 --> 21:16.200] They've got a contract, and they've got specific rules to follow. [21:16.200 --> 21:23.080] They violate one of those rules, and in the process deny you the full free access to or [21:23.080 --> 21:26.680] enjoyment of any right during breach of contract. [21:26.680 --> 21:31.800] Yeah, generally it's a criminal act, and for all these years we've been talking about filing [21:31.800 --> 21:37.600] criminal charges on them, and been doing that, but it hasn't fixed the system. [21:37.600 --> 21:44.280] So I've kind of morphed the reason for filing criminal complaints. [21:44.280 --> 21:48.120] I no longer file criminal complaints to embarrass them. [21:48.120 --> 21:52.880] I know they're not going to act on the criminal complaints, and you file them to embarrass [21:52.880 --> 21:58.040] them, make them look bad, but that hasn't worked either. [21:58.040 --> 22:00.680] So the next thing I'm looking to do... [22:00.680 --> 22:02.680] Well it works in a different way. [22:02.680 --> 22:06.600] It doesn't fix the system, but it gets them to the point where they leave you alone. [22:06.600 --> 22:08.360] Yeah, that it does. [22:08.360 --> 22:12.840] That was talking about your out of date plates. [22:12.840 --> 22:14.960] Tell them about that. [22:14.960 --> 22:18.880] Well yeah, my truck, I mean I was driving around in my truck today, and I was noticing [22:18.880 --> 22:25.860] that a sheriff, a county sheriff was there, but he didn't have any interest in staying [22:25.860 --> 22:26.860] behind me. [22:26.860 --> 22:31.080] And the same thing happened, you know, I don't know about the time everybody starts coming [22:31.080 --> 22:36.760] home from work for 35 o'clock, the police tend to be out, you know. [22:36.760 --> 22:46.200] And well, so I had a municipal police, a cruiser also, that had an opportunity to bother me [22:46.200 --> 22:51.720] about my plates, everything was 10 years out of date or something, and they didn't come [22:51.720 --> 22:54.720] up to give me a hard time about anything. [22:54.720 --> 22:56.080] They didn't even want to be behind me. [22:56.080 --> 22:57.720] They had somewhere else to be. [22:57.720 --> 23:01.160] You know how busy these cops are. [23:01.160 --> 23:04.240] Yes, that must be it. [23:04.240 --> 23:09.960] Yeah, once you beat them up a while, if you start a fight with them, they'll fight you [23:09.960 --> 23:10.960] pretty hard. [23:10.960 --> 23:17.040] But when you're done with them, they don't ever want to have a fight with you again. [23:17.040 --> 23:18.560] But that doesn't fix the system. [23:18.560 --> 23:23.600] Yeah, it doesn't take care of the real underlying problem. [23:23.600 --> 23:33.600] So I'm working on a strategy, let's sue them personally in their individual capacity. [23:33.600 --> 23:37.320] Now, I did this to the highest judges in Texas. [23:37.320 --> 23:46.760] I went to the Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court and gave him a 250 page criminal complaint [23:46.760 --> 23:48.920] against the governor. [23:48.920 --> 23:56.120] And I reasoned that since I was filing against the highest level member of the executive [23:56.120 --> 24:03.120] branch, it was appropriate that I file it with the highest level magistrate in the state. [24:03.120 --> 24:12.040] And under 2.09, titled Who Are Magistrates, very first one, justices of the Supreme Court. [24:12.040 --> 24:16.340] And so he was the chief justice. [24:16.340 --> 24:22.720] So he was kind of like the governor in the judicial side. [24:22.720 --> 24:26.400] So I filed this complaint with him and he ignored it. [24:26.400 --> 24:32.300] He didn't do what 15.09 commanded him to do. [24:32.300 --> 24:39.960] So I filed a complaint against the head of the other court branch in Texas, the Texas [24:39.960 --> 24:47.400] Court of Criminal Appeals, Sharon Keller, and I accused the chief justice of failing [24:47.400 --> 24:51.400] to issue a warrant against the governor. [24:51.400 --> 24:54.340] And of course, she didn't write a complaint either. [24:54.340 --> 24:57.200] And she somehow missed the irony of it. [24:57.200 --> 25:05.120] And you know, I'm dealing, I'm going after the highest level public officials in Texas. [25:05.120 --> 25:10.200] And nobody can do anything about it. [25:10.200 --> 25:15.480] They cannot so much as frown at me. [25:15.480 --> 25:25.480] If they do, I pull out 3605, 3606 Penal Code, 3605 Witness Tampering, 3606 Retaliation [25:25.480 --> 25:27.640] Obstruction. [25:27.640 --> 25:34.820] And apparently they have a sense about that too, because they refrain from certain kinds [25:34.820 --> 25:38.720] of actions against you while this stuff is going on. [25:38.720 --> 25:43.200] It seems like they kind of have a sixth sense and they realize that they ought to back off. [25:43.200 --> 25:51.360] Yeah, like when you call 911 on them, this little guy refused to go up and get the clerk [25:51.360 --> 25:55.480] for me because I wasn't going in the courthouse without a mask. [25:55.480 --> 26:00.480] And first, you know, I told him to go get this clerk and he looked up at me and said, [26:00.480 --> 26:01.480] is that an order? [26:01.480 --> 26:06.320] And I thought about it a minute and I said, yeah, as a matter of fact, it is. [26:06.320 --> 26:09.520] Well, how's that worked out for you so far? [26:09.520 --> 26:14.640] I leaned over him and looked down at him, he's a little short guy. [26:14.640 --> 26:15.640] Pretty good. [26:15.640 --> 26:17.520] You want to test it? [26:17.520 --> 26:18.520] He said yes. [26:18.520 --> 26:19.520] That's not fair. [26:19.520 --> 26:22.520] You're pushing his buttons. [26:22.520 --> 26:27.520] I pulled out my cell phone down 911. [26:27.520 --> 26:30.440] We get to do that. [26:30.440 --> 26:37.080] And once I'm dialing 911, he said, you can't use a cell phone in here, in this building. [26:37.080 --> 26:41.880] I looked up and said, are you going to interfere with a 911 call? [26:41.880 --> 26:43.960] In Texas, that's a felony. [26:43.960 --> 26:46.440] Now, he didn't realize it. [26:46.440 --> 26:48.400] He was too full of himself. [26:48.400 --> 26:53.560] But one of the other bailiffs who remembered who I was, he remembered me trying to get [26:53.560 --> 26:57.420] Justice of the Peace Evans to arrest him once. [26:57.420 --> 27:01.820] He come over and drugged the kid away. [27:01.820 --> 27:05.000] This is so much fun. [27:05.000 --> 27:08.280] You have the power to take control of the system. [27:08.280 --> 27:18.480] When I sued the state for this $485 million, I sued the unknown sheriff's deputy. [27:18.480 --> 27:25.240] I don't know who he is yet, but when I find out, I'll add his name to the suit and ask [27:25.240 --> 27:29.600] him, how's it going for you so far, Bubba? [27:29.600 --> 27:34.800] I sued your boss, the sheriff, for $20 million because of what you did. [27:34.800 --> 27:37.240] How's that working out for you? [27:37.240 --> 27:42.280] Okay, we can do this. [27:42.280 --> 27:45.960] We can't do it if we get angry. [27:45.960 --> 27:53.320] We can't do it if we feel disenfranchised or put upon. [27:53.320 --> 27:56.000] Even if we are being disenfranchised. [27:56.000 --> 28:00.400] Yeah, even if we are, because it debilitates us. [28:00.400 --> 28:02.560] Respond to that emotion. [28:02.560 --> 28:05.360] It makes us helpless. [28:05.360 --> 28:12.160] So the best way to get around that, instead of having them come and do bad stuff to you, [28:12.160 --> 28:17.400] the best fight to have is the one you picked. [28:17.400 --> 28:22.080] So go down there and demand that they do something they're not going to want to do. [28:22.080 --> 28:25.920] And then when they don't do it, eh, gotcha. [28:25.920 --> 28:29.800] Once they step across the line, then you're done with them. [28:29.800 --> 28:37.400] You dial 911 or you make up a criminal complaint against them and take it to a magistrate. [28:37.400 --> 28:41.320] That's what I did in Victoria County and he said that since I wasn't an attorney that [28:41.320 --> 28:43.920] he wasn't even going to read them. [28:43.920 --> 28:49.720] The next time he saw me, he was having been summoned into court because I had sued him [28:49.720 --> 28:52.680] personally. [28:52.680 --> 28:57.500] He was not near so arrogant that time. [28:57.500 --> 28:59.880] This works guys. [28:59.880 --> 29:07.480] This really gets their attention and I'm building these suits and I will be building them as [29:07.480 --> 29:16.040] templates and I'll explain to you how to walk them right into it. [29:16.040 --> 29:19.760] Whatever state you're in, it doesn't matter, you can do this in any state. [29:19.760 --> 29:21.600] They all do it wrong. [29:21.600 --> 29:31.280] They all think that the, the citizen like you or me are just chumps, just someone to [29:31.280 --> 29:32.280] mess with. [29:32.280 --> 29:37.960] They're not the least bit worried about you until you go in photographing a police department [29:37.960 --> 29:43.240] in Colorado Springs and they arrest him and hold him for six hours. [29:43.240 --> 29:44.240] Let him go. [29:44.240 --> 29:45.820] He sues them for 40 million. [29:45.820 --> 29:48.880] They settled for 20 million in two months. [29:48.880 --> 29:51.880] Had that work out for you bubba. [29:51.880 --> 30:02.160] Hang on Randy Kelton, we'll be right back. [30:02.160 --> 30:06.560] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe, but [30:06.560 --> 30:11.400] it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.400 --> 30:16.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:16.160 --> 30:17.760] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.760 --> 30:22.160] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again and once your privacy [30:22.160 --> 30:26.120] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.120 --> 30:31.240] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.240 --> 30:33.880] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.880 --> 30:38.200] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [30:38.200 --> 30:41.720] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [30:41.720 --> 30:45.400] Start over with Startpage. [30:45.400 --> 30:50.160] Data privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [30:50.160 --> 30:54.640] your personal information, but what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.640 --> 30:56.000] It's not an idle question. [30:56.000 --> 31:01.880] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of US companies admit their security was breached [31:01.880 --> 31:04.200] by hackers in the last year. [31:04.200 --> 31:07.480] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to Startpage.com. [31:07.480 --> 31:12.320] Unlike other search engines, Startpage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.320 --> 31:15.760] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals [31:15.760 --> 31:16.760] to see. [31:16.760 --> 31:18.000] The cupboard would be bare. [31:18.000 --> 31:21.360] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.360 --> 31:23.320] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:23.320 --> 31:31.160] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:31.160 --> 31:32.160] I lost my son. [31:32.160 --> 31:33.160] My nephew. [31:33.160 --> 31:34.160] My uncle. [31:34.160 --> 31:35.160] My son. [31:35.160 --> 31:36.160] On September 11th, 2001. [31:36.160 --> 31:39.400] People don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. [31:39.400 --> 31:43.480] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.480 --> 31:47.400] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7. [31:47.400 --> 31:52.200] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more [31:52.200 --> 31:53.200] to the story. [31:53.200 --> 31:54.600] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.600 --> 31:55.600] My uncle. [31:55.600 --> 31:56.600] My nephew. [31:56.600 --> 31:57.600] My son. [31:57.600 --> 31:58.600] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:58.600 --> 31:59.600] Why it fell. [31:59.600 --> 32:00.600] Why it matters. [32:00.600 --> 32:01.600] And what you can do. [32:01.600 --> 32:06.360] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:06.360 --> 32:09.440] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [32:09.440 --> 32:13.400] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.400 --> 32:16.600] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:16.600 --> 32:20.640] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.640 --> 32:24.480] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.480 --> 32:25.880] our rights through due process. [32:25.880 --> 32:29.840] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.840 --> 32:33.640] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.640 --> 32:36.040] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:36.040 --> 32:40.040] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:40.040 --> 32:41.360] ordering your copy today. [32:41.360 --> 32:44.720] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.720 --> 32:49.120] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:49.120 --> 32:51.440] documents and other useful resource material. [32:51.440 --> 32:55.400] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.400 --> 32:59.400] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [32:59.400 --> 33:00.400] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [34:00.400 --> 34:01.400] the power. [34:01.400 --> 34:02.400] Send a request to the leader, the captain of all officers. [34:02.400 --> 34:03.400] Tell them to uphold the law, and please don't abuse their power. [34:03.400 --> 34:04.400] They beat and they beat and they cheat and they cheat and they lie every hour. [34:04.400 --> 34:05.400] So Mr. Officer, please stop abusing your power. [34:05.400 --> 34:06.400] You pull me over and tell me to be silent, sir. [34:06.400 --> 34:33.400] I need to speak to my lawyer, Mr. Officer. [34:33.400 --> 34:38.400] You acting like you're no judge. [34:38.400 --> 34:41.400] You're finding me guilty, sir. [34:41.400 --> 34:46.400] So when you're gonna stop abusing your power. [34:46.400 --> 34:50.400] When you're gonna stop abusing your power. [34:50.400 --> 34:53.400] Okay, we are back in Cheltenham County, Utah Radio. [34:53.400 --> 34:59.400] I'm gonna do one more segment on this, but this is important. [34:59.400 --> 35:01.400] This is why I do the show. [35:01.400 --> 35:04.400] This is why I've been doing the show all this time. [35:04.400 --> 35:07.400] Mostly I've been looking for the answer. [35:07.400 --> 35:12.400] And I think we're finally getting to how to actually fix it. [35:12.400 --> 35:17.400] And we don't just fix it by suing them. [35:17.400 --> 35:20.400] That's not good enough. [35:20.400 --> 35:29.400] We sue them, we fix it by setting them up and playing them like a cheap fiddle. [35:29.400 --> 35:32.400] The JP in Victoria County, I give him these complaints. [35:32.400 --> 35:35.400] He won't take them because I'm not a lawyer. [35:35.400 --> 35:46.400] Next time he sees me, he's had to buy pay his own lawyer and come into court over the suit I filed against him. [35:46.400 --> 35:50.400] You better believe he had himself a whole different attitude. [35:50.400 --> 35:53.400] Now I have sued all the highest judges in Texas. [35:53.400 --> 36:03.400] Now you would think that when you're down here in the municipal courts dealing with these low level chumps, [36:03.400 --> 36:06.400] they're not the sharpest knives in the drawer. [36:06.400 --> 36:10.400] You don't expect much from them and you don't get much from them. [36:10.400 --> 36:16.400] But a lot of huffing and puffing and bullying and pressure tactics. [36:16.400 --> 36:26.400] You would think as you get up into higher levels that you would encounter a higher level of official. [36:26.400 --> 36:33.400] If that's what you think and what you expect, you are likely to be horribly disappointed. [36:33.400 --> 36:39.400] I was surprised and disappointed. [36:39.400 --> 36:44.400] A suit of all in their personal capacity in the federal court. [36:44.400 --> 36:55.400] And they get the attorney general, the highest level prosecutor in the state of Texas, to file him an answer. [36:55.400 --> 37:02.400] And the answer was so bad, I bar grieved the attorney general lawyers for filing it. [37:02.400 --> 37:04.400] They loved that. [37:04.400 --> 37:17.400] Did they not figure out that I wrote this suit specifically to get around official immunity? [37:17.400 --> 37:22.400] Right there in the suit, I was as clear as I could be. [37:22.400 --> 37:25.400] And they just pulled out their standard. [37:25.400 --> 37:33.400] We got absolute immunity, we don't have absolute immunity, we have qualified immunity, blah, blah, blah. [37:33.400 --> 37:38.400] Did they not notice I filed this in the federal court? [37:38.400 --> 37:47.400] The state cannot immunize a state official from violations of federal law. [37:47.400 --> 37:49.400] That's absolutely clear. [37:49.400 --> 37:54.400] It's been in law since, what was that, 1907? [37:54.400 --> 38:00.400] What was that young, ex parte young? [38:00.400 --> 38:04.400] Oh yeah, I think it was early 1900s, 1908 maybe. [38:04.400 --> 38:07.400] It was right at the turn of the century. [38:07.400 --> 38:20.400] So it's been in law over 100 years that said that the state cannot immunize a state official from violating a federal law, [38:20.400 --> 38:27.400] as that would interfere with the supremacy clause. [38:27.400 --> 38:30.400] That was clear. [38:30.400 --> 38:39.400] 1908, the state has no power to impart to its officer immunity from responsibility to the supreme authority of the United States. [38:39.400 --> 38:41.400] Yeah, that's pretty clear. [38:41.400 --> 38:46.400] I did a search for it on case law or case text. [38:46.400 --> 38:53.400] And if you do, I got the name up, when you have the name up and you do a search on the name again, [38:53.400 --> 39:01.400] it will give you a section on the side that shows you how many citations that have cited it. [39:01.400 --> 39:07.400] I got over 10,000 cases that cited this thing. [39:07.400 --> 39:11.400] So it's not like it's brand new. [39:11.400 --> 39:15.400] It's not like nobody ever used it. [39:15.400 --> 39:28.400] And rule 3.3A2, I believe it is, the rules of professional conduct under failure to speak with candor to the court, [39:28.400 --> 39:41.400] if there is adverse case law, case law adverse to your position, and the opposing party doesn't address it, you are required to give notice to the court. [39:41.400 --> 39:45.400] So this said they can't get immunity. [39:45.400 --> 39:55.400] They wrote this, one of them was 23 or 24 pages, 30 pages, and you can only have 20 pages. [39:55.400 --> 40:00.400] And he argued official immunity. [40:00.400 --> 40:05.400] Never told them about this, the fact that they couldn't have it at all. [40:05.400 --> 40:08.400] Is that the best you guys can do? [40:08.400 --> 40:14.400] This I would expect from a first year law student. [40:14.400 --> 40:16.400] I said something similar. [40:16.400 --> 40:26.400] Even beginning attorneys fresh out of law school know not to try to argue outside the four corners. [40:26.400 --> 40:28.400] Yeah. [40:28.400 --> 40:32.400] I think the attorney might have gotten a little bit mad at me about that. [40:32.400 --> 40:35.400] Poor baby. [40:35.400 --> 40:39.400] But this is, there's something going on here. [40:39.400 --> 40:43.400] Nobody is taking these guys to task. [40:43.400 --> 40:47.400] And clearly they're not taking each other to task. [40:47.400 --> 40:52.400] You know, under the idea that steel sharpens steel. [40:52.400 --> 40:55.400] Well, there's no sharpness here. [40:55.400 --> 41:09.400] These guys, this is probably the first time all of the judges and all of the heads of every Texas agency that trains public officials have all been sued in one suit. [41:09.400 --> 41:13.400] It's probably never happened before. [41:13.400 --> 41:18.400] And they throw this garbage response at us. [41:18.400 --> 41:21.400] And they got the Texas attorney general to do it. [41:21.400 --> 41:23.400] This is so stupid. [41:23.400 --> 41:35.400] If you went into court, say you're sued in court, either criminal or civil, and you tell the court you want court appointed counsel. [41:35.400 --> 41:40.400] You want a government lawyer to represent you. [41:40.400 --> 41:44.400] What are they going to tell you? [41:44.400 --> 41:53.400] What is the one time you can get a government lawyer? [41:53.400 --> 41:57.400] If you're sued in your government official capacity. [41:57.400 --> 41:59.400] No, no, no. [41:59.400 --> 42:07.400] You as a citizen, say you get charged with a crime and you want a government lawyer. [42:07.400 --> 42:11.400] Under what conditions can they give you a government lawyer? [42:11.400 --> 42:12.400] I don't think they can. [42:12.400 --> 42:20.400] I think there's an indigency situation where I could have one get appointed to me, but it wouldn't necessarily be a government lawyer. [42:20.400 --> 42:25.400] It might be somebody on that little rotation and paid for by the taxpayers. [42:25.400 --> 42:27.400] That is it. [42:27.400 --> 42:30.400] That is the only time. [42:30.400 --> 42:36.400] Now, I had a lawyer tell me once that he was under contract. [42:36.400 --> 42:38.400] He said, I'm not under contract. [42:38.400 --> 42:39.400] He was court appointed. [42:39.400 --> 42:44.400] The city of Austin wanted me to have one because they figured he would screw me. [42:44.400 --> 42:47.400] And I told him what he was going to do. [42:47.400 --> 42:51.400] And then I had all these motions filed and he would it was 19 issues in him. [42:51.400 --> 42:55.400] He would adequately adjudicate every single one of them. [42:55.400 --> 42:56.400] I'm sorry. [42:56.400 --> 42:58.400] That's not what it was. [42:58.400 --> 42:59.400] Something he did. [42:59.400 --> 43:03.400] And I told him he was under contract. [43:03.400 --> 43:05.400] He said, I'm not under contract with you, Mr. [43:05.400 --> 43:09.400] Kelton, I'm under contract with the state because he's court appointed. [43:09.400 --> 43:10.400] He was government lawyer. [43:10.400 --> 43:12.400] I said, yes, you are. [43:12.400 --> 43:16.400] But I'm the intended third party beneficiary and I have standing under the contract. [43:16.400 --> 43:22.400] Well, so that's the only time I can get a government lawyer. [43:22.400 --> 43:29.400] Is if I'm being criminally prosecuted, sometimes civil prosecutions, you can get one. [43:29.400 --> 43:33.400] But you have to be indigent to get it. [43:33.400 --> 43:39.400] So what the heck was the attorney general doing filing this answer? [43:39.400 --> 43:41.400] I'll finish this up quickly on the other side. [43:41.400 --> 43:44.400] We'll go to our callers. [43:44.400 --> 43:50.400] I'm filing an action asking them to strike the rule 12 pleading as improperly filed [43:50.400 --> 43:56.400] because the attorney general didn't have standing to act as an attorney for these public officials. [43:56.400 --> 43:59.400] He can't. [43:59.400 --> 44:00.400] I love logos. [44:00.400 --> 44:04.400] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.400 --> 44:07.400] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [44:07.400 --> 44:08.400] I need my truth fixed. [44:08.400 --> 44:10.400] I'd be lost without logos. [44:10.400 --> 44:13.400] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [44:13.400 --> 44:15.400] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite. [44:15.400 --> 44:20.400] And I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [44:20.400 --> 44:21.400] How can I help logos? [44:21.400 --> 44:23.400] Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:23.400 --> 44:26.400] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [44:26.400 --> 44:28.400] You can order your supplies or holiday gifts. [44:28.400 --> 44:30.400] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:30.400 --> 44:34.400] Now go to logosradionetwork.com. [44:34.400 --> 44:37.400] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:37.400 --> 44:42.400] Now when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. [44:42.400 --> 44:43.400] Do I pay extra? [44:43.400 --> 44:44.400] No. [44:44.400 --> 44:46.400] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [44:46.400 --> 44:47.400] No. [44:47.400 --> 44:48.400] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:48.400 --> 44:49.400] No. [44:49.400 --> 44:50.400] I mean, yes. [44:50.400 --> 44:51.400] Wow. [44:51.400 --> 44:53.400] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [44:53.400 --> 44:55.400] This is perfect. [44:55.400 --> 44:56.400] Thank you so much. [44:56.400 --> 44:58.400] We are welcome. [44:58.400 --> 45:00.400] Happy holidays, logos. [45:00.400 --> 45:04.400] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.400 --> 45:07.400] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [45:07.400 --> 45:15.400] The affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.400 --> 45:19.400] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.400 --> 45:23.400] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.400 --> 45:28.400] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [45:28.400 --> 45:34.400] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.400 --> 45:43.400] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.400 --> 45:52.400] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.400 --> 46:01.400] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.400 --> 46:31.400] Okay, we are back. [46:31.400 --> 46:34.400] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [46:34.400 --> 46:38.400] And we're talking about suing the crap out of these guys. [46:38.400 --> 46:48.400] You would think you sue the highest judges in Texas that you got the smartest lawyers in Texas that you're coming after. [46:48.400 --> 46:52.400] These guys are chumps. [46:52.400 --> 46:56.400] Almost couldn't believe they got the attorney general to do that. [46:56.400 --> 47:01.400] Did they not realize the position they put themselves in? [47:01.400 --> 47:23.400] I'm claiming the attorney general had no standing to represent him because the Texas Constitution forbids government agencies from providing any special emolument, any kind of benefits to a public official that's not in their original contract. [47:23.400 --> 47:27.400] It specifically forbids them to. [47:27.400 --> 47:36.400] So providing a government paid lawyer where you're sued in your personal capacity, that's an extra benefit. [47:36.400 --> 47:42.400] There's nothing in their contract that authorizes that. [47:42.400 --> 47:45.400] So what were they thinking? [47:45.400 --> 47:52.400] Brett, if you went to the Court of Criminal Appeals and asked them to appoint you counsel. [47:52.400 --> 47:54.400] They're going to laugh me out of there. [47:54.400 --> 48:00.400] Yeah, you know, take them two seconds to say you, you got to be intelligent. [48:00.400 --> 48:01.400] Then they did it. [48:01.400 --> 48:09.400] Point is, you think suing these high level lawyers are really going to be tough and difficult? [48:09.400 --> 48:12.400] They're chumps. [48:12.400 --> 48:16.400] They're just as much of a lawyer as the other ones you've run into. [48:16.400 --> 48:21.400] And now I've got them where they put you. [48:21.400 --> 48:24.400] I'm asking the judge to throw out their Rule 12. [48:24.400 --> 48:31.400] If the judge throws out the Rule 12, the Rule 12 told the time to answer. [48:31.400 --> 48:35.400] They had till the Monday after the 20th day. [48:35.400 --> 48:39.400] Well, they filed the Rule 12 and it stopped the clock. [48:39.400 --> 48:49.400] If I get the Rule 12 pulled, this is improperly filed, then the clock never stopped and their time ran out. [48:49.400 --> 48:57.400] And in my motion to strike the pleading, I asked for default judgment. [48:57.400 --> 49:05.400] So I want these judges over there looking at this and I want them to feel like you do when they arrest you [49:05.400 --> 49:11.400] and throw you in jail and drag you in front of the court, threaten to throw you in jail and drag you in front of the public [49:11.400 --> 49:13.400] and ruin your reputation and your career. [49:13.400 --> 49:17.400] I want them to feel just like you do. [49:17.400 --> 49:19.400] I imagine you succeeded in that. [49:19.400 --> 49:26.400] I imagine that they've noticed how poorly they were represented and they feel pretty exposed. [49:26.400 --> 49:32.400] And the point of this, guys, is there's nothing keeping you from doing this. [49:32.400 --> 49:35.400] It is not hard. [49:35.400 --> 49:40.400] And if anybody wants to go after them, I'll send you my pleadings. [49:40.400 --> 49:43.400] I've tried to write them in a template format. [49:43.400 --> 49:48.400] The only thing you'd have to change is the statement of facts. [49:48.400 --> 49:50.400] You sue them. [49:50.400 --> 49:52.400] They do something you don't like, sue them. [49:52.400 --> 49:54.400] They don't follow the rules. [49:54.400 --> 49:56.400] They violate the law, sue them. [49:56.400 --> 50:04.400] Personally, in their individual capacity, it cost me more to sue in the county court in Texas. [50:04.400 --> 50:11.400] It cost me almost $500 to file a county court suit in Victoria, Texas. [50:11.400 --> 50:15.400] It cost $250 to file in the Fed. [50:15.400 --> 50:20.400] That's cheaper than a ticket. [50:20.400 --> 50:23.400] So it's jump change. [50:23.400 --> 50:24.400] $250? [50:24.400 --> 50:25.400] Yeah. [50:25.400 --> 50:26.400] Is that like a senior discount? [50:26.400 --> 50:28.400] I don't know. [50:28.400 --> 50:29.400] Hey, hey, hey, hey. [50:29.400 --> 50:31.400] $250, $300, something like that. [50:31.400 --> 50:34.400] The last time I filed, it was $250. [50:34.400 --> 50:36.400] It may have went up a little bit. [50:36.400 --> 50:38.400] But it's right in that range. [50:38.400 --> 50:41.400] It's not that much. [50:41.400 --> 50:44.400] And the feds are great. [50:44.400 --> 50:47.400] I filed the complaint. [50:47.400 --> 50:49.400] They filed a rule 12. [50:49.400 --> 50:50.400] I filed a response. [50:50.400 --> 50:56.400] Then the court will come back and say, okay, here's what's wrong with your complaint. [50:56.400 --> 50:59.400] And this is what you need to do to fix it. [50:59.400 --> 51:03.400] They may dismiss my case with or without prejudice. [51:03.400 --> 51:06.400] Almost certainly, this is dismissed without prejudice. [51:06.400 --> 51:09.400] And they'll say, here's what's wrong with it. [51:09.400 --> 51:11.400] This is what you need to do to fix it. [51:11.400 --> 51:16.400] In the Fed, there is an order and a judgment. [51:16.400 --> 51:19.400] The judgment is effectively finding effective conclusions in law. [51:19.400 --> 51:23.400] And in that, they tell you exactly what's wrong with your suit. [51:23.400 --> 51:26.400] And the other side will file a rule 12. [51:26.400 --> 51:31.400] And in the rule 12, they'll tell you what all their defenses are. [51:31.400 --> 51:34.400] So you've got everything you need. [51:34.400 --> 51:36.400] You know, I filed this suit. [51:36.400 --> 51:38.400] I was fully expecting a rule 12. [51:38.400 --> 51:40.400] I was expecting a good one. [51:40.400 --> 51:45.400] Tell me everything that you're going to claim, all the issues you're going to bring. [51:45.400 --> 51:50.400] So that when I filed my amended, I got all this good information. [51:50.400 --> 51:53.400] Because I know the judge is going to tell me everything is wrong with it. [51:53.400 --> 51:56.400] So I got everything I need to file my amended pleading. [51:56.400 --> 52:00.400] And I don't care what the judge rules anyway. [52:00.400 --> 52:09.400] The only thing I'm thinking about is what issues can I bring that they're not going to want to get to the appellate court? [52:09.400 --> 52:15.400] And the best thing they're not going to want to get to the appellate court is the Young Doctrine. [52:15.400 --> 52:17.400] You don't have any immunity in the Fed, guys. [52:17.400 --> 52:21.400] They are not going to want me to get that to the appellate court. [52:21.400 --> 52:23.400] Because the appellate court rules against them. [52:23.400 --> 52:25.400] They are toast. [52:25.400 --> 52:26.400] Yeah. [52:26.400 --> 52:29.400] And so there's a lot of people that are toast. [52:29.400 --> 52:31.400] And they do the same thing to you. [52:31.400 --> 52:35.400] They want to create a situation where you're terrified to move ahead. [52:35.400 --> 52:38.400] So you'll make a deal. [52:38.400 --> 52:42.400] So guys, I'm about to get your pleading thrown out. [52:42.400 --> 52:44.400] I'm about to get a default judgment. [52:44.400 --> 52:50.400] Even if the judge denies me default judgment, they know I'm going to appeal it. [52:50.400 --> 52:53.400] And what if the Court of Appeals rules in my favor? [52:53.400 --> 52:56.400] They're toast. [52:56.400 --> 52:59.400] So what's their option? [52:59.400 --> 53:03.400] And this brings a question maybe you folks can help me answer. [53:03.400 --> 53:09.400] Okay, I sue all the highest judges in Texas, the heads of all these agencies. [53:09.400 --> 53:17.400] So if they want to make a deal, how do I get paid? [53:17.400 --> 53:22.400] If these judges go to the state and say, guys, you got to bail us out here, [53:22.400 --> 53:27.400] this guy's going to bankrupt us, and you won't have a Court of Appeal, criminal appeals, [53:27.400 --> 53:29.400] because we'll all resign. [53:29.400 --> 53:31.400] You got to do something. [53:31.400 --> 53:36.400] So how can the state pay me? [53:36.400 --> 53:39.400] Governor maybe? [53:39.400 --> 53:49.400] I have heard about issues where some group sued the state and won, [53:49.400 --> 53:59.400] and the state had to convene a special session of the legislature to authorize the payment. [53:59.400 --> 54:04.400] Would that be cool or what? [54:04.400 --> 54:12.400] I sue all the highest judges in Texas, and they want to make a deal so I don't get in their pocket. [54:12.400 --> 54:15.400] So they have to call in the legislature. [54:15.400 --> 54:20.400] Now, I could argue that the legislature can't pay the suit, [54:20.400 --> 54:26.400] because it would violate Article III, Section 52 of the Texas Constitution. [54:26.400 --> 54:29.400] But I'm not going to argue that. [54:29.400 --> 54:36.400] I'll let them pay me, because that's the kind of guy I am. [54:36.400 --> 54:43.400] Guys, I think we can win this by getting a few of you guys out there [54:43.400 --> 54:46.400] change your career path. [54:46.400 --> 54:53.400] I'm looking at changing my career path and making my money by suing public officials. [54:53.400 --> 55:01.400] Go in, set them up, get them to act stupid, sue them, and make a deal. [55:01.400 --> 55:04.400] Write me a check, guys. [55:04.400 --> 55:11.400] And then after the deal's over, I go back the next week, get them to do it again. [55:11.400 --> 55:14.400] Sue them again, or go to another jurisdiction, get them to do it. [55:14.400 --> 55:17.400] Sue them again. [55:17.400 --> 55:19.400] We will change things. [55:19.400 --> 55:24.400] When they start getting the crap sued out of them every time they turn around, [55:24.400 --> 55:26.400] they'll make changes so they can fix it. [55:26.400 --> 55:29.400] Writing criminal complaints hasn't done it. [55:29.400 --> 55:32.400] Showing them what's wrong, that hasn't done it. [55:32.400 --> 55:37.400] We start suing them in the federal courts, we're going to get some changes. [55:37.400 --> 55:41.400] Okay, I'm going to stop now, but I'm excited about how this is working, [55:41.400 --> 55:47.400] and I'm hoping I can get some other folks excited about a way to make a bunch of money [55:47.400 --> 55:49.400] and fix the system in the process. [55:49.400 --> 55:52.400] Okay, I'm going to go to our callers, going to Ralph in Texas. [55:52.400 --> 55:56.400] Ralph, what do you have for us today? [55:56.400 --> 56:01.400] Well, sir, this is related to my last call a couple weeks ago. [56:01.400 --> 56:09.400] The court is just not wanting to give me a fair amount of time to respond and reply. [56:09.400 --> 56:19.400] Before, the judge had gone from 21 days after service to 15 days after filing. [56:19.400 --> 56:24.400] Oh, good. This is great. You love this. [56:24.400 --> 56:34.400] Now, file for a stay of proceedings to give you time to petition the court for a writ of mandamus. [56:34.400 --> 56:37.400] I did that. [56:37.400 --> 56:41.400] Did that stay the proceedings? [56:41.400 --> 56:45.400] No, it's still ongoing. [56:45.400 --> 56:50.400] Did the court of appeals address your mandamus? [56:50.400 --> 56:53.400] No, nothing's happened on that yet. [56:53.400 --> 56:57.400] I filed the mandamus and filed a motion to stay at the same time, [56:57.400 --> 57:03.400] but the mandamus went to the appeals court and the motion to stay went to the district court. [57:03.400 --> 57:09.400] I did not give the district court the mandamus because they said I had to serve it on them, [57:09.400 --> 57:15.400] so I sent it to them in the mail, and I think the postal carriers know my name [57:15.400 --> 57:17.400] because they're having fun with my name. [57:17.400 --> 57:21.400] No, no, no. You can't serve an original document through the mail. [57:21.400 --> 57:27.400] You have to have that served by process server or anybody other than you. [57:27.400 --> 57:32.400] Well, I called the Fifth Circuit and they said I could do that. [57:32.400 --> 57:38.400] Oh, okay. Fifth Circuit. Oh, this is the Fed. Oh, okay. [57:38.400 --> 57:47.400] So the district judge gave the defendants two days. [57:47.400 --> 57:55.400] Now, the defendants is a team of attorneys about 24 strong with other staff as well, [57:55.400 --> 58:02.400] so the defendants was given two days to respond to my motion to stay, [58:02.400 --> 58:09.400] and I was given one day to reply, and my day is up tomorrow, [58:09.400 --> 58:11.400] and I will not be replying to it. [58:11.400 --> 58:18.400] The defense attorney is bringing up issues that were not related. [58:18.400 --> 58:21.400] He's just kind of just going off on it. [58:21.400 --> 58:23.400] Okay. You don't have to worry about replying. [58:23.400 --> 58:28.400] That would be rebutting their answer. You don't have to worry about that. [58:28.400 --> 58:31.400] Hang on. We'll pick this up on the other side. [58:31.400 --> 58:34.400] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Our Radio. [58:34.400 --> 58:38.400] Let's see. We've got a full board of callers, so I'm not going to be able to call in. [58:38.400 --> 58:41.400] I'm just wondering, he said 24 strong. [58:41.400 --> 58:46.400] Does that make, if they have 24 lawyers, does it get stronger or weaker? [58:46.400 --> 58:50.400] We'll figure that out on the other side. [58:50.400 --> 58:53.400] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [58:53.400 --> 58:58.400] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.400 --> 59:01.400] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [59:01.400 --> 59:06.400] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:06.400 --> 59:09.400] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.400 --> 59:13.400] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [59:13.400 --> 59:18.400] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.400 --> 59:22.400] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [59:22.400 --> 59:28.400] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.400 --> 59:33.400] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.400 --> 59:43.400] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.400 --> 59:47.400] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.400 --> 59:50.400] That's freestudybible.com. [59:50.400 --> 01:00:00.400] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.400 --> 01:00:05.400] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.400 --> 01:00:09.400] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.400 --> 01:00:11.400] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:11.400 --> 01:00:14.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:00:14.400 --> 01:00:17.400] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:17.400 --> 01:00:19.400] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:19.400 --> 01:00:22.400] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.400 --> 01:00:27.400] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.400 --> 01:00:32.400] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.400 --> 01:00:35.400] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.400 --> 01:00:38.400] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:00:38.400 --> 01:00:42.400] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.400 --> 01:00:46.400] Start over with Startpage. [01:00:46.400 --> 01:00:48.400] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.400 --> 01:00:51.400] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.400 --> 01:00:54.400] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.400 --> 01:00:57.400] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed [01:00:57.400 --> 01:01:00.400] reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.400 --> 01:01:03.400] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:03.400 --> 01:01:06.400] a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.400 --> 01:01:09.400] Third party, Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.400 --> 01:01:12.400] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.400 --> 01:01:17.400] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.400 --> 01:01:32.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:32.400 --> 01:01:35.400] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.400 --> 01:01:39.400] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:39.400 --> 01:01:41.400] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:41.400 --> 01:01:44.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:01:44.400 --> 01:01:47.400] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:02:15.400 --> 01:02:18.400] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, [01:02:18.400 --> 01:02:21.400] a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.400 --> 01:02:25.400] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom [01:02:25.400 --> 01:02:27.400] from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.400 --> 01:02:30.400] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:30.400 --> 01:02:34.400] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [01:02:34.400 --> 01:02:39.400] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.400 --> 01:02:43.400] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:43.400 --> 01:02:46.400] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.400 --> 01:02:49.400] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:49.400 --> 01:02:53.400] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.400 --> 01:03:21.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:23.400 --> 01:03:30.400] OK, we are back. [01:03:30.400 --> 01:03:33.400] Brendan Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio. [01:03:33.400 --> 01:03:38.400] On this, the 31st day of not October. [01:03:38.400 --> 01:03:42.400] Brett made sure that I knew it was not October. [01:03:42.400 --> 01:03:45.400] He's always trying to get me to say the wrong month. [01:03:45.400 --> 01:03:50.400] 31st day of August, 2023. [01:03:50.400 --> 01:03:53.400] And we're talking to Ralph in Texas. [01:03:53.400 --> 01:03:56.400] Ralph, you're the one that got a ticket on a federal reservation, [01:03:56.400 --> 01:03:59.400] a national park or something? [01:03:59.400 --> 01:04:04.400] No, sir. This is a defective product case. [01:04:04.400 --> 01:04:06.400] Wait a minute, say that again? [01:04:06.400 --> 01:04:10.400] Defective product case. [01:04:10.400 --> 01:04:14.400] Defective product case in this diversity jurisdiction. [01:04:14.400 --> 01:04:18.400] So we're in the federal court. [01:04:18.400 --> 01:04:27.400] What kind of title? Property or real or? [01:04:27.400 --> 01:04:31.400] What kind of property is it if it's not real, Brett? [01:04:31.400 --> 01:04:32.400] Personal. [01:04:32.400 --> 01:04:35.400] Moveable property. [01:04:35.400 --> 01:04:36.400] Say that again. [01:04:36.400 --> 01:04:39.400] I don't. Consumables. It's consumable. [01:04:39.400 --> 01:04:46.400] Oh, OK. OK. So it's not real property. It's not a title issue or anything. OK. [01:04:46.400 --> 01:04:51.400] Right. So this is a defective product and. [01:04:51.400 --> 01:04:56.400] Oh, so there's no government officials involved in this. [01:04:56.400 --> 01:05:00.400] Well, there's judges in it. [01:05:00.400 --> 01:05:07.400] No, just I mean, the defendant is not a government official. [01:05:07.400 --> 01:05:08.400] Correct. [01:05:08.400 --> 01:05:11.400] That that levels out the playing field a whole lot. [01:05:11.400 --> 01:05:13.400] Makes it easier. [01:05:13.400 --> 01:05:17.400] Right. And they've got this is the second law firm. [01:05:17.400 --> 01:05:25.400] I did bar grieve the first law firm, but actually they didn't get the bar agreements until they after they left the case. [01:05:25.400 --> 01:05:28.400] I don't know why they left. They just up and left. [01:05:28.400 --> 01:05:37.400] And the new people that are in the new the new firm have not bar grieve them yet, but I've been preparing everything. [01:05:37.400 --> 01:05:52.400] The problem is, I got behind and then instead of me getting called up, the magistrate judge in the case gave me nine days, actually less than nine days, to respond to the defendant's motion to compel. [01:05:52.400 --> 01:05:59.400] If I had the statutory 21 days that the rule allows, I would have answered their discovery. [01:05:59.400 --> 01:06:03.400] No, no, no. The 21 days. [01:06:03.400 --> 01:06:12.400] That goes to an answer to the original suit. I think you have 15 days on a motion by the rules. [01:06:12.400 --> 01:06:16.400] This is a local rule, Randy. [01:06:16.400 --> 01:06:19.400] What's what court are you in? [01:06:19.400 --> 01:06:23.400] I'm in the Western District of Louisiana. [01:06:23.400 --> 01:06:30.400] Oh, wait a minute. Those are coon asses. [01:06:30.400 --> 01:06:36.400] That's a whole different world. OK, so they have a local rule that's 12 days. [01:06:36.400 --> 01:06:39.400] Twenty one days. [01:06:39.400 --> 01:06:47.400] Twenty one days. OK, I'm in. I've got one in the Western District of Texas and it's 15 days. [01:06:47.400 --> 01:06:52.400] OK, so they they didn't. Don't worry about that. [01:06:52.400 --> 01:06:56.400] That'll give you grounds for appeal. [01:06:56.400 --> 01:07:01.400] This is all about how much money can you cost the other side? [01:07:01.400 --> 01:07:04.400] How much can I cost the other side? Not. [01:07:04.400 --> 01:07:09.400] Yeah, that's what their lawyers are expensive. [01:07:09.400 --> 01:07:14.400] They have all the money in the world. [01:07:14.400 --> 01:07:20.400] Does that tell you who I'm suing? [01:07:20.400 --> 01:07:26.400] Possibly, yeah. Products liability case. [01:07:26.400 --> 01:07:30.400] They still still to them. It's all about money. [01:07:30.400 --> 01:07:33.400] It's a calculation. [01:07:33.400 --> 01:07:46.400] Is if they if you they you win the suit, how bad is that for them? [01:07:46.400 --> 01:07:53.400] Well, they just paid out a nine thousand dollar lawsuit to a woman that lost a leg. [01:07:53.400 --> 01:07:57.400] Nine thousand. No, I'm sorry. Nine million. [01:07:57.400 --> 01:08:10.400] Oh, nine million. OK. Well, you know, you got to consider if it's a retail, if it's a company that sells to the public. [01:08:10.400 --> 01:08:19.400] Part of the problem is their good name. But aside from that, you you're not dealing with public officials here. [01:08:19.400 --> 01:08:28.400] So hammer the law, the law firm, they'll they'll probably bail. [01:08:28.400 --> 01:08:33.400] Once you bargain the snot out of them, a good chance they'll bail. [01:08:33.400 --> 01:08:36.400] They'll have to hire new lawyers and it's going to cost them a fortune. [01:08:36.400 --> 01:08:42.400] The best, the best chance. I'm really upset about the trial judge and the magistrate judge. [01:08:42.400 --> 01:08:50.400] The trial judge in the first motion for me to respond to gave me five days. [01:08:50.400 --> 01:08:59.400] They've denied me e-filing. So if I've got five days and the court is one hundred and twenty miles round trip away [01:08:59.400 --> 01:09:06.400] and the last time I sent a certified took nine days to deliver it. [01:09:06.400 --> 01:09:10.400] Well, generally, they go by the mailbox rule. [01:09:10.400 --> 01:09:14.400] No, they're not doing now. [01:09:14.400 --> 01:09:16.400] What did you call them? [01:09:16.400 --> 01:09:23.400] The mailbox rule when the Postal Service post marks it. [01:09:23.400 --> 01:09:26.400] But the courts haven't been following the mailbox rule. [01:09:26.400 --> 01:09:33.400] Well, yeah, in the Fed, they've got a rule that says that the clerk, it only counts as filed when the clerk gets it. [01:09:33.400 --> 01:09:38.400] So this should get an interlocutory appeal. [01:09:38.400 --> 01:09:41.400] Well, I don't see how that can be. I've got a mandamus. [01:09:41.400 --> 01:09:51.400] I'm wanting to do a constitutional challenge to what's called equal and meaningful access to the courts. [01:09:51.400 --> 01:09:55.400] I found some documents on the Internet that cover that subject very well. [01:09:55.400 --> 01:10:02.400] I've already been arguing before the court that I'm an owner of the court seeking the court for remedy, [01:10:02.400 --> 01:10:08.400] while the defendants have hired counsel who are using the courts as usufruks. [01:10:08.400 --> 01:10:14.400] Why are usufruks getting privileges that owners are not? [01:10:14.400 --> 01:10:19.400] So I want to do a constitutional challenge on that, because here's the way I'm looking at. [01:10:19.400 --> 01:10:21.400] I'm going to read a couple of notes here, not long. [01:10:21.400 --> 01:10:26.400] We the people are told by them the court that ignorance of the law is no excuse for violating the law. [01:10:26.400 --> 01:10:31.400] We the people are told by them the court that we are all held to the same standard. [01:10:31.400 --> 01:10:35.400] If we party litigants are all held to the same standard, [01:10:35.400 --> 01:10:44.400] why then does only the one of us party litigants who hires an attorney get reimbursed for their cost in litigating? [01:10:44.400 --> 01:10:48.400] Okay, you will not win that one. [01:10:48.400 --> 01:10:50.400] Well, I'm going to try. [01:10:50.400 --> 01:10:52.400] That one's been okay. [01:10:52.400 --> 01:10:55.400] You're making a major error there. [01:10:55.400 --> 01:10:56.400] Okay. [01:10:56.400 --> 01:11:04.400] The error you're making is you're making proactive statements of law out of your own mouth. [01:11:04.400 --> 01:11:13.400] Well, I've got these two review books, Fordham. [01:11:13.400 --> 01:11:15.400] Let me see if I can find it right here. [01:11:15.400 --> 01:11:23.400] Procedural due process rights, procedural due process rights of pro se civil litigants. [01:11:23.400 --> 01:11:36.400] Julie M. Bradlow is from 87, and Fordham Law Review, volume 55, issue 6, article 10, 1987, [01:11:36.400 --> 01:11:41.400] concerning right of access for pro se litigants. [01:11:41.400 --> 01:11:46.400] So they're putting a pretty good argument out, but I'm having trouble reading the law. [01:11:46.400 --> 01:11:51.400] Okay. [01:11:51.400 --> 01:12:03.400] The problem I want to address with what you just said is you made statements concerning law out of your own mouth. [01:12:03.400 --> 01:12:09.400] Instead of you saying that, if you read that out of this manual, look for footnotes. [01:12:09.400 --> 01:12:15.400] Go down to the footnotes, look up the cases that they reference in the footnotes, [01:12:15.400 --> 01:12:21.400] and find similar verbiage in the case that they're referencing. [01:12:21.400 --> 01:12:23.400] They're paraphrasing what's in the case. [01:12:23.400 --> 01:12:27.400] Go to the case and quote what's out of the case. [01:12:27.400 --> 01:12:28.400] Okay. [01:12:28.400 --> 01:12:31.400] They're just paraphrasing, and I need to find their quote. [01:12:31.400 --> 01:12:32.400] Okay. [01:12:32.400 --> 01:12:33.400] Yeah. [01:12:33.400 --> 01:12:37.400] That way, you're not making a proactive statement of law out of your mouth. [01:12:37.400 --> 01:12:40.400] You're making it out of the mouth of the court. [01:12:40.400 --> 01:12:50.400] And when I do that, like you put that statement in, and then end it with as per such and such a case, [01:12:50.400 --> 01:13:00.400] which reads as follows, colon, and then I set the quote to single space, 12 point font instead of 14, [01:13:00.400 --> 01:13:04.400] and shrink both margins a half inch. [01:13:04.400 --> 01:13:09.400] And put it single space. [01:13:09.400 --> 01:13:13.400] So visually, it stands out from the rest of the documents. [01:13:13.400 --> 01:13:18.400] And that's actually in the rules, that you do that with quotations, [01:13:18.400 --> 01:13:24.400] so that the court can visually see where the quotation begins and where the quotation ends. [01:13:24.400 --> 01:13:26.400] So if they're interested in it, they can read it. [01:13:26.400 --> 01:13:28.400] If not, they can just jump right over it. [01:13:28.400 --> 01:13:31.400] But you have the law in there. [01:13:31.400 --> 01:13:35.400] They can't pay any attention to your opinions. [01:13:35.400 --> 01:13:47.400] They have a duty to properly apply the law as it comes to them to the facts in the case. [01:13:47.400 --> 01:13:51.400] So your opinions don't mean squat. [01:13:51.400 --> 01:13:54.400] Only the law you bring them as it applies to the case. [01:13:54.400 --> 01:14:00.400] So instead of you making the statement, you put the statement in out of the mouth of the court. [01:14:00.400 --> 01:14:02.400] Okay, now. [01:14:02.400 --> 01:14:06.400] If I'm being denied equal and meaningful access, [01:14:06.400 --> 01:14:10.400] the attorneys can go into the courthouse with electronic devices. [01:14:10.400 --> 01:14:13.400] The attorneys are allowed to do e-filing. [01:14:13.400 --> 01:14:15.400] The attorneys are allowed so many days. [01:14:15.400 --> 01:14:19.400] I am allowed less because I either have to drive to the court, [01:14:19.400 --> 01:14:25.400] or I have to mail and then subtract the time from my time allotment, my deadlines. [01:14:25.400 --> 01:14:28.400] I have to subtract time for the mail, which like I said, [01:14:28.400 --> 01:14:34.400] certified mail taking nine days to go 60 miles, that's ridiculous. [01:14:34.400 --> 01:14:38.400] It's because they know me, and they're just holding the mail. [01:14:38.400 --> 01:14:40.400] They're just saying, okay, we'll just sit on that. [01:14:40.400 --> 01:14:46.400] When my green cards come back, they're never readable, and the printed part is never filled out. [01:14:46.400 --> 01:14:49.400] And though I've complained about it, they just pass it on to somebody else. [01:14:49.400 --> 01:14:51.400] Well, that's not us. That's the post office over there. [01:14:51.400 --> 01:14:55.400] I called the postal inspector, and they wouldn't help me either. [01:14:55.400 --> 01:14:58.400] They just didn't let me run around, and I didn't stick with it. [01:14:58.400 --> 01:15:01.400] If I stuck with it, I'd have gotten something, I'm sure, but I just couldn't stick with it. [01:15:01.400 --> 01:15:02.400] They're trying to wear me down. [01:15:02.400 --> 01:15:07.400] So I'm thinking I can do a constitutional challenge to the due process violations [01:15:07.400 --> 01:15:12.400] that they're committing on me by giving me unequal access to the courts. [01:15:12.400 --> 01:15:16.400] Okay, then this would be grounds for interlocutory appeal. [01:15:16.400 --> 01:15:22.400] If this is allowed to continue, it interferes with your ability to adjudicate your case. [01:15:22.400 --> 01:15:30.400] So that's grounds for interlocutory, and interlocutory stops them. [01:15:30.400 --> 01:15:35.400] That's the words I was not thinking of. Great, appreciate it. [01:15:35.400 --> 01:15:41.400] Okay, but now, do I still have grounds for a constitutional challenge? [01:15:41.400 --> 01:15:42.400] Well, I guess I don't. [01:15:42.400 --> 01:15:49.400] Well, this is how you would make the constitutional challenge, through an interlocutory appeal. [01:15:49.400 --> 01:15:56.400] Oh, well, I'm confused now. So I write up a constitutional challenge to what and file it with... [01:15:56.400 --> 01:15:59.400] Okay, what is the nature of your constitutional challenge? [01:15:59.400 --> 01:16:07.400] You're saying that they get attorney fees and you don't? [01:16:07.400 --> 01:16:11.400] No, no, no, that's a good argument, and I can include that. [01:16:11.400 --> 01:16:14.400] But no, my argument is a violation of due process. [01:16:14.400 --> 01:16:22.400] I am being denied equal and meaningful access, which are the documents, the law reviews I was reading, entitling them in to go. [01:16:22.400 --> 01:16:24.400] That's what they're talking about. [01:16:24.400 --> 01:16:31.400] How are you being denied? By not being given enough time to get your document to the court? [01:16:31.400 --> 01:16:37.400] Or not being able to file electronically? How? [01:16:37.400 --> 01:16:45.400] I'm arguing that's the same thing. If they're not going to let me file electronically, then they should allow me time to send it in the mail or... [01:16:45.400 --> 01:16:48.400] Oh, okay, then that's grounds for interlocutory. [01:16:48.400 --> 01:17:00.400] No, actually not. Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Group of Law Radio, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.400 --> 01:17:05.400] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [01:17:05.400 --> 01:17:12.400] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [01:17:12.400 --> 01:17:17.400] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [01:17:17.400 --> 01:17:24.400] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. [01:17:24.400 --> 01:17:31.400] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [01:17:31.400 --> 01:17:38.400] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [01:17:38.400 --> 01:17:43.400] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. 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[01:19:20.400 --> 01:19:23.400] Don't fool me [01:19:27.400 --> 01:19:29.400] Well [01:19:31.400 --> 01:19:36.400] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:19:36.400 --> 01:19:41.400] I was blindsided but now I can see your plan [01:19:41.400 --> 01:19:46.400] You put the fear in my pockets, took the money from my hand [01:19:46.400 --> 01:19:51.400] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:19:55.400 --> 01:19:58.400] Ain't gonna fool me [01:19:58.400 --> 01:20:03.400] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:20:11.400 --> 01:20:17.400] Okay, we are back. Ready to talk. We're at Fountain. We're with Rule of Law Radio. We're talking to Ralph in Texas. [01:20:17.400 --> 01:20:20.400] Okay, I think I got figured out what's going on, Ralph. [01:20:20.400 --> 01:20:21.400] Okay. [01:20:21.400 --> 01:20:26.400] You're trying to head something off that you can't head off. [01:20:26.400 --> 01:20:32.400] You're saying that you're being harmed because they're not letting you e-file. [01:20:32.400 --> 01:20:37.400] So my question to you would be how have you been harmed? [01:20:37.400 --> 01:20:42.400] I don't have enough time to do my filings. [01:20:42.400 --> 01:20:44.400] So what? [01:20:44.400 --> 01:20:47.400] How are you harmed? [01:20:47.400 --> 01:20:50.400] How am I harmed? [01:20:50.400 --> 01:20:56.400] You're inconvenienced by that but you haven't been harmed yet. [01:20:56.400 --> 01:21:00.400] And Brett and I spoke to this on the break. [01:21:00.400 --> 01:21:06.400] A lot of times people are trying to head off things that don't need to be headed off. [01:21:06.400 --> 01:21:14.400] You can claim this is giving you a problem but you haven't been harmed. [01:21:14.400 --> 01:21:25.400] You won't be harmed until you get a default ruling against you for failure to timely respond. [01:21:25.400 --> 01:21:33.400] Once if you're unable to respond in time and the court rules against you for not responding in time, now you've been harmed. [01:21:33.400 --> 01:21:41.400] Now you have standing to raise the issue in interlocutory. [01:21:41.400 --> 01:21:43.400] Does that make sense? [01:21:43.400 --> 01:21:56.400] Okay, so if I file a reply to the defendant's response out of time and the judge says you're not timely, then I'll have grounds for interlocutory. [01:21:56.400 --> 01:21:59.400] Exactly. [01:21:59.400 --> 01:22:05.400] Because the judge may say, oh, okay, you didn't have enough time, I'll go ahead and accept it. [01:22:05.400 --> 01:22:08.400] So you haven't been harmed. [01:22:08.400 --> 01:22:09.400] Right, I got you now. [01:22:09.400 --> 01:22:16.400] Well, what about the gas money going to the court, the time going to the court and the money spent on certified? [01:22:16.400 --> 01:22:18.400] Is that a harm? [01:22:18.400 --> 01:22:19.400] Nope. [01:22:19.400 --> 01:22:23.400] That's the cost of doing business. [01:22:23.400 --> 01:22:27.400] That's the cost of them not allowing the e-filing. [01:22:27.400 --> 01:22:34.400] That is something you can ask for at the end of the case. [01:22:34.400 --> 01:22:39.400] But e-filing is not a statutory requirement. [01:22:39.400 --> 01:22:47.400] E-filing is something the courts are allowed to do if they choose. [01:22:47.400 --> 01:22:49.400] It's still too new. [01:22:49.400 --> 01:22:51.400] Yeah, I don't want to drag this out forever. [01:22:51.400 --> 01:22:55.400] I understand where you're going with it and what you're saying is making sense. [01:22:55.400 --> 01:23:08.400] But at the same time, I'm thinking that I'm not getting equal and meaningful access to the courts if the other side is allowed to e-file and I am not. [01:23:08.400 --> 01:23:18.400] What you don't know yet is how much time has that court been spending with people that don't know how to e-file properly [01:23:18.400 --> 01:23:32.400] and have to do a whole lot of back and forth and kind of be training wheels for the filers and maybe they don't like to let people e-file because it's just too hard on them. [01:23:32.400 --> 01:23:35.400] It takes too much time. [01:23:35.400 --> 01:23:49.400] And if they can just take your paperwork and allow you the extra, you know, if it takes an extra three days and they just say, you know what, let him have the extra three days. Let's not worry about this. [01:23:49.400 --> 01:23:55.400] And you still haven't been harmed. [01:23:55.400 --> 01:24:12.400] Where I'm going to, if you've got a case to deal with, if you spend your time on a fight you can't win or a fight that's not ripe, you may not get what you have to do done. [01:24:12.400 --> 01:24:23.400] Well, I just paid $500 to file a mandamus requiring the magistrate judge and then I amended it to add the trial judge to allow me the time that the rules say. [01:24:23.400 --> 01:24:34.400] And like I say, I would have been able to answer the defendant if I would have been allowed the 21 days that the book says, but instead the judge gave me less than half of that. [01:24:34.400 --> 01:24:40.400] Okay, but you still haven't been harmed, so they're not going to be in a hurry. [01:24:40.400 --> 01:25:06.400] Once you've been harmed, then you still have your motion in place. You might want to file an amended mandamus showing how you've been harmed and asked the court to order the judge to grant you, you know, to accept your pleading, grant you an extension of time to file the pleading. [01:25:06.400 --> 01:25:14.400] Yeah. Or to reconsider his denial of your motion to allow defiling. [01:25:14.400 --> 01:25:15.400] Okay. [01:25:15.400 --> 01:25:20.400] Because they're going to look at that and they're going to say, you know what, that seems pretty reasonable. [01:25:20.400 --> 01:25:24.400] You lay out what your costs have been and what the difficulties have been. [01:25:24.400 --> 01:25:31.400] Okay, you're in the federal court. I'm going to make a suggestion. [01:25:31.400 --> 01:25:38.400] Do not treat the federal magistrate as if he or she is your enemy. [01:25:38.400 --> 01:25:41.400] Generally, they're not. [01:25:41.400 --> 01:25:48.400] They don't always give you what you want, but they're too busy to care about you. [01:25:48.400 --> 01:26:02.400] You know, they're not going to single you out for special persecution because you're a pro se. I certainly haven't found that, and most of the people I know who are in federal courts have not found that at all. [01:26:02.400 --> 01:26:10.400] Now, if you go in there and do a lot of patriot mythology stuff, yeah, they'll kick you around pretty good. [01:26:10.400 --> 01:26:18.400] Tina, Tina, have you been in the federal courts? [01:26:18.400 --> 01:26:23.400] Only when the bank removed me to federal court. [01:26:23.400 --> 01:26:30.400] Okay, well, tell them about how you smoothed the clerk in the courts. [01:26:30.400 --> 01:26:43.400] Well, after they gave me a really hard time, especially on filing my case, taking them three weeks saying, well, we're not sure if you're in the right place. [01:26:43.400 --> 01:26:50.400] And I said, that's up to the other side to decide and ask to remove it. You can't make that decision. [01:26:50.400 --> 01:26:58.400] Well, I've got to go to the boss. So I filed a professional conduct complaint. [01:26:58.400 --> 01:27:02.400] And then everything changed. [01:27:02.400 --> 01:27:07.400] And the clerk was so nice to me and so helpful. [01:27:07.400 --> 01:27:23.400] So I then filed a professional conduct compliment about the change and about how it was a benefit to the public, the new attitude, and it just got better and better for me after that. [01:27:23.400 --> 01:27:34.400] Okay, the point is, Ralph, if you treat them like an enemy, they'll treat you like an enemy. [01:27:34.400 --> 01:27:42.400] And it may seem wrong that you shouldn't have to do this, but you got to play them. [01:27:42.400 --> 01:27:48.400] Civility is a big part. You're in the civil court. Be civil. [01:27:48.400 --> 01:27:58.400] Don't assume the judge is your enemy, because if you do, you'll make him your enemy, especially in the federal court. [01:27:58.400 --> 01:28:03.400] They will tell you what's wrong with whatever you do. [01:28:03.400 --> 01:28:09.400] Just don't think of them as your enemy, even if they are. [01:28:09.400 --> 01:28:17.400] Treat them with professional courtesy. As you get higher up, that'll come back and work well for you. [01:28:17.400 --> 01:28:23.400] Because you'll never expect to win in the trial court, expect to win in the appellate court. [01:28:23.400 --> 01:28:36.400] If the appellate court comes in there and sees you treating their magistrate like crap, they may want to be fair and even, but they don't like somebody treating their magistrate like crap. [01:28:36.400 --> 01:28:39.400] So they'll treat you like crap. [01:28:39.400 --> 01:28:42.400] Now that may be wrong. [01:28:42.400 --> 01:28:49.400] But that's how it works in the world I live in. Pick your battles real careful. [01:28:49.400 --> 01:28:54.400] Okay, point taken. I've got it. I heard it, and I will work on it. I certainly will. [01:28:54.400 --> 01:28:59.400] Appreciate your time, and you got a board for callers, so I'm not going to hold you up. I'm going to listen. [01:28:59.400 --> 01:29:01.400] Okay. Thank you, Ralph. [01:29:01.400 --> 01:29:02.400] Thank you. [01:29:02.400 --> 01:29:08.400] Okay. Now we're going to Ms. Tina. [01:29:08.400 --> 01:29:11.400] Thank you for the help back there. [01:29:11.400 --> 01:29:23.400] That's okay. And it's actually interesting, you know, to go to my thing next, because you were talking about don't make the judges upset. [01:29:23.400 --> 01:29:28.400] Well, sometimes you've got to. [01:29:28.400 --> 01:29:42.400] I should have added unnecessarily, because I certainly did not mean that you have to kiss up to the judge. Hold him professionally responsible, but be civil in the process. [01:29:42.400 --> 01:29:45.400] And you are especially good at that. [01:29:45.400 --> 01:30:02.400] Hang on. About to go to our sponsors, Randall Kelton, Brett Fountain, Lou of La Radio. We've got two callers and two segments, so I'm not going to give out the caller number. We'll be right back. [01:30:02.400 --> 01:30:09.400] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:09.400 --> 01:30:12.400] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:12.400 --> 01:30:15.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. [01:30:43.400 --> 01:30:48.400] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.400 --> 01:30:56.400] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart, but think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.400 --> 01:31:03.400] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:03.400 --> 01:31:10.400] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.400 --> 01:31:15.400] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:15.400 --> 01:31:21.400] So take a deep breath and chill out. It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.400 --> 01:31:26.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.400 --> 01:31:36.400] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.400 --> 01:31:43.400] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.400 --> 01:31:46.400] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.400 --> 01:31:49.400] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.400 --> 01:31:50.400] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.400 --> 01:31:51.400] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.400 --> 01:31:53.400] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.400 --> 01:31:54.400] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.400 --> 01:31:55.400] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.400 --> 01:31:58.400] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.400 --> 01:32:01.400] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.400 --> 01:32:05.400] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:05.400 --> 01:32:08.400] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:08.400 --> 01:32:13.400] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.400 --> 01:32:20.400] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.400 --> 01:32:26.400] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. 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[01:33:02.400 --> 01:33:13.400] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:13.400 --> 01:33:26.400] Yeah, who you want to chip? Who you take me for? Free tole? Who you want to chip? Me no free tole? You can't chip me. What I'm saying? Don't let them chip you in the morning, chip you in the evening. Put a chip in your body. [01:33:26.400 --> 01:33:41.400] And anyway you go computer reading. You can't hide me from nobody. What me say? Chip in your mom, chip in your daddy. Chip in your grandpa and the granny. Chip in me, chip in your baby. Chip in your family, whole family. [01:33:41.400 --> 01:33:53.400] Chip in your dog and the cat around me. Chip in the beef and you still go eat it. Chip in the fish, them all in the sea. Chip in the shark and the whale around me. You know still mankind gone chip crazy. [01:33:53.400 --> 01:34:12.400] Them the kind of thing man they want to read. Social security, them go tell me. Number when them give me, them rip it up you see. I'm chip you in the morning, chip you in the evening. Chip you all the dinner time. Experiment on mankind. But man you know say them lie. Well, when I want a chip man you have to your body. [01:34:12.400 --> 01:34:31.400] Freedom or something man you fight for me. You should tell them them fi read it. Constitution set us free. Don't let them put no chip in your body. Put no chip in you dog or cat you see. No put no chip in your cow and go eat it. No put no chip in the fish and go eat it. All in the whale and the shark in the sea. [01:34:31.400 --> 01:34:48.400] Put the little chip in the little baby. Want to put the chip in a ground for you see. Want to put the little chip in a high man body. If me go hide in the Atlantic sea. Man did have to lie me say gone go find me. Satellite get mad, satellite get angry. Two chip them use me say crash up you see. [01:34:48.400 --> 01:35:06.400] Me say chip in the morning, chip in the evening. Chip in your grassy body. Man don't let them come come chip away. Put no chip in the little baby. Me say chip in the morning, chip in the evening. They want to come and not chip me. But they want to chip all in the sea. And the shark and the whale are running. [01:35:06.400 --> 01:35:14.400] Okay, we are back. Radio Caldwell. Red Fountain. Radio. We're talking to Tina in California. Okay, go ahead Tina. [01:35:14.400 --> 01:35:34.400] Okay, I was just going to give you a little update as to what's happened in my appeal case where I've had eight people of reasonable prudence send in their affidavits in regard to judicial prejudice and bias. [01:35:34.400 --> 01:35:51.400] And on August the 9th I filed a motion for order to show cause as to why the other side should not be sanctioned for their criminality and referred up to a higher court. [01:35:51.400 --> 01:36:13.400] I also filed a motion to for, what is it, not finding the facts but conclusions of law as to why the judge refused to honor my request that the other side give full disclosures as required by law. [01:36:13.400 --> 01:36:24.400] And it took him 45 days to deny me that. So nothing happened. They didn't respond on the 28th at 10, 19 p.m. [01:36:24.400 --> 01:36:48.400] I filed a further request to disqualify the judge with those supporting affidavits because Canon 3E4C requires disqualification when circumstances are such that a reasonable person aware of the facts would doubt the justice's ability to be impartial. [01:36:48.400 --> 01:37:03.400] And all of these affidavits said that. So at 10, 19 I filed this. Nothing was logged into the court the next day. I kept checking, kept checking. At 3, 15 p.m. I checked and I printed out a copy. [01:37:03.400 --> 01:37:24.400] My document had not been logged into the court. Then at 3, 42 I checked again and it was all of a sudden logged in as being filed on the 28th. And there was also the order there from the judge denying all of my motions from the 9th and that one. [01:37:24.400 --> 01:37:43.400] So there was a little chicanery going on because. Like they're making it look like it was filed previous to the judge's order when all they really did was sit on it and for days they've been doing nothing. [01:37:43.400 --> 01:38:03.400] Doing nothing. That's pretty weird. It's very weird because it's impossible for the clerk to file electronically file it on the 28th because it wasn't filed by true filing until 10, 19 p.m. They don't walk through the night. [01:38:03.400 --> 01:38:05.400] Exactly. [01:38:05.400 --> 01:38:22.400] So it's just a little chicanery going on. So I'm now in the process of sending a supplemental to the judicial commission asking for the judge's impeachment and disqualification because he's, you know, he's violating the judicial canons of ethics. [01:38:22.400 --> 01:38:37.400] The Constitution and the rule of law. And he's now retaliating against me because he knows I filed that and the judge is not allowed to retaliate. [01:38:37.400 --> 01:38:54.400] So anyway, that's where I'm going with that. But I'm not. You said the judge was not allowed to retire. Retaliate. They cannot retaliate against someone who retaliate. Okay. Okay. Got it. Got it. [01:38:54.400 --> 01:39:00.400] Yeah, who's filed or is a witness to any investigation. [01:39:00.400 --> 01:39:08.400] Wait a minute. Retaliation is a criminal act in every state. [01:39:08.400 --> 01:39:13.400] I was just reading Dr. Joe gave me a book by Edward Vieira. [01:39:13.400 --> 01:39:27.400] And the last chapter in there, he's talking about how when the Supreme Court judges violate law, the president has a duty to pursue criminal actions against them. [01:39:27.400 --> 01:39:37.400] If this judge is violating law, you should move criminally against him. They're not going to pursue it, but you push it toward a grand jury. [01:39:37.400 --> 01:39:42.400] The problem the judge has, he never knows what a grand jury is actually going to do. [01:39:42.400 --> 01:39:50.400] In California, a grand jury can investigate into anything they want to. [01:39:50.400 --> 01:39:56.400] So you might want to prepare a set of complaints and forward it to a grand jury. [01:39:56.400 --> 01:40:12.400] Well, that was my next step after filing, because I'm actually going to appeal his orders to this California Supreme Court, because you can't just, oh, he also denied me oral argument. [01:40:12.400 --> 01:40:15.400] Just flat out denied. [01:40:15.400 --> 01:40:20.400] And the other side said in the papers that they welcome oral argument. [01:40:20.400 --> 01:40:24.400] I asked for it. He denied it. [01:40:24.400 --> 01:40:27.400] He may be able to do that. [01:40:27.400 --> 01:40:31.400] They may say that he can rule on the pleadings if he doesn't need oral argument. [01:40:31.400 --> 01:40:35.400] He doesn't have to have oral argument. [01:40:35.400 --> 01:40:39.400] You don't necessarily have a right to oral argument. [01:40:39.400 --> 01:40:50.400] What I read you do, unless the judge can see absolutely no question of disagreement or, you know, facts. [01:40:50.400 --> 01:40:55.400] What he's saying is it's not going to make a difference what you say. [01:40:55.400 --> 01:40:57.400] I'm going to do what I'm going to do. [01:40:57.400 --> 01:41:01.400] It's exactly right, but that's retaliating. [01:41:01.400 --> 01:41:02.400] Yeah. [01:41:02.400 --> 01:41:13.400] And so I'm going to say it is file, you know, go ahead and pursue with the Supreme, but also file criminal charges against him with the grand jury. [01:41:13.400 --> 01:41:17.400] Now that's that's like playing Russian roulette. [01:41:17.400 --> 01:41:25.400] You know, he doesn't think the grand jury will indict him, but you never know what a grand jury is going to do. [01:41:25.400 --> 01:41:33.400] You start making grand jury noises, you're going to get his attention, especially in California. [01:41:33.400 --> 01:41:40.400] California actually has the best grand jury laws that I've seen in any state. [01:41:40.400 --> 01:41:48.400] They can investigate into contracts, they can investigate into anything they want to. [01:41:48.400 --> 01:41:51.400] That sounds wonderful. [01:41:51.400 --> 01:41:58.400] And you got a good story that would definitely get their attention. [01:41:58.400 --> 01:42:10.400] I have, because this judge also ruled years ago on a case where he said this one attorney was deceitful in how he went about things. [01:42:10.400 --> 01:42:14.400] So he said, well, I'm not going to allow him to get away with that. [01:42:14.400 --> 01:42:18.400] This is not what the law is about. [01:42:18.400 --> 01:42:23.400] But he's allowing this attorney to get away with the state. [01:42:23.400 --> 01:42:29.400] So he's ruling in my case opposite of what he ruled in another case. [01:42:29.400 --> 01:42:32.400] Yes, so that'd be good. [01:42:32.400 --> 01:42:35.400] You get a good story for a grand jury. [01:42:35.400 --> 01:42:37.400] Yeah, that's what we're going for. [01:42:37.400 --> 01:42:40.400] And then so that's where I'm going next. [01:42:40.400 --> 01:42:42.400] I just wanted to keep you up to date. [01:42:42.400 --> 01:42:51.400] But I also wanted to mention you were talking about all these officials and you're going after minutiae, the people who refuse to go after minutiae. [01:42:51.400 --> 01:42:55.400] People don't really understand the corruption and how bad it is. [01:42:55.400 --> 01:43:17.400] I was just reading some stuff where when minutiae was in charge of one West Bank, his arm called Freedom, Financial Freedom, which was the reverse mortgage arm of one West Bank, was found guilty of doing many, many bad things. [01:43:17.400 --> 01:43:23.400] And they sold it to CIT Bank before the case came through. [01:43:23.400 --> 01:43:29.400] So CIT had to pay the fine of 89 million dollars. [01:43:29.400 --> 01:43:34.400] That money went to Treasury when minutiae was in charge of it. [01:43:34.400 --> 01:43:42.400] And he was the one in charge of one West Bank. [01:43:42.400 --> 01:43:51.400] I'm glad you reminded me because when I followed my motion to strike, I didn't make up one for the district attorney. [01:43:51.400 --> 01:43:52.400] I'll have to do that. [01:43:52.400 --> 01:43:54.400] Make sure I get him included. [01:43:54.400 --> 01:43:55.400] Hang on. [01:43:55.400 --> 01:43:57.400] Randy Kelton, Brent Fountain rules our radio. [01:43:57.400 --> 01:44:12.400] We'll be right back. [01:44:27.400 --> 01:44:32.400] Control shift delete and then scroll down the cookies and clear them. [01:44:32.400 --> 01:44:33.400] Bye bye. [01:44:33.400 --> 01:44:40.400] Now I go to logos radio network dot com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand side. [01:44:40.400 --> 01:44:46.400] Bookmark the link and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies. [01:44:46.400 --> 01:44:48.400] No cookies for me. [01:44:48.400 --> 01:44:50.400] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:44:50.400 --> 01:44:57.400] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [01:44:57.400 --> 01:44:58.400] Fee is for cookie. [01:44:58.400 --> 01:45:00.400] Fee is for classified. [01:45:00.400 --> 01:45:03.400] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.400 --> 01:45:15.400] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:15.400 --> 01:45:18.400] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.400 --> 01:45:22.400] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.400 --> 01:45:25.400] Thousands have won with our step by step course. [01:45:25.400 --> 01:45:27.400] And now you can too. [01:45:27.400 --> 01:45:33.400] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:33.400 --> 01:45:42.400] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.400 --> 01:45:51.400] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.400 --> 01:46:13.400] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.400 --> 01:46:26.400] Some things in this world I will never understand. [01:46:26.400 --> 01:46:30.400] Some things I realize fully. [01:46:30.400 --> 01:46:35.400] Somebody's gonna police a policeman. [01:46:35.400 --> 01:46:39.400] Somebody's gonna police a bully. [01:46:39.400 --> 01:46:44.400] There's always a room at the top of the hill. [01:46:44.400 --> 01:46:48.400] I hear through the grave mine and it's lonely left too. [01:46:48.400 --> 01:46:52.400] They're wishing it was more than our position to fill. [01:46:52.400 --> 01:46:56.400] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will. [01:46:56.400 --> 01:47:19.400] Some things in this world I will never understand. [01:47:19.400 --> 01:47:30.400] Oh, they don't think they can always control, especially California, so it looks like you're getting up to the place where you might start actually getting some traction. [01:47:30.400 --> 01:47:33.400] Well, I'm hoping so, and I'm really having fun doing it now. [01:47:33.400 --> 01:47:37.400] It's finally come to the point where I know they're going to rule against me. [01:47:37.400 --> 01:47:39.400] I know he's already made up his mind. [01:47:39.400 --> 01:47:40.400] He doesn't care. [01:47:40.400 --> 01:47:44.400] He thinks the attorneys, you know, the sun shines out of their behind. [01:47:44.400 --> 01:47:50.400] So it doesn't matter what illegal things they do, he's going to let them go. [01:47:50.400 --> 01:47:59.400] But he's going to regret it because I'm going to go after him so long and so far that he's going to wish he'd been there. [01:47:59.400 --> 01:48:15.400] And on top of the Mnuchin thing, Mnuchin appointed Joseph Otting, who was a partner in One West Bank to the Office of the Controller of the Currency. [01:48:15.400 --> 01:48:18.400] And that's supposed to protect consumers. [01:48:18.400 --> 01:48:19.400] But you know what? [01:48:19.400 --> 01:48:32.400] It's one of the good old boys in there, and Joseph Otting was found to have fabricated email, you know, supporting the sale of One West Bank, the state bank. [01:48:32.400 --> 01:48:40.400] And he fabricated these emails from customers and mortgage people who were being foreclosed on. [01:48:40.400 --> 01:48:47.400] So the corruption is so deep and so wide, it's unbelievable. [01:48:47.400 --> 01:48:49.400] Yeah, corruption is everywhere. [01:48:49.400 --> 01:48:55.400] I'm hoping I'm building some tools so we can start sticking people on them. [01:48:55.400 --> 01:48:57.400] OK, Tina, I have one more caller. [01:48:57.400 --> 01:49:02.400] OK, yes, you go for it and I will go on the listen line. [01:49:02.400 --> 01:49:03.400] Thank you, Tina. [01:49:03.400 --> 01:49:08.400] OK, now we're going to go to Jack in Texas. [01:49:08.400 --> 01:49:13.400] OK, what do you got for us, Jack? [01:49:13.400 --> 01:49:18.400] Hello, guys. [01:49:18.400 --> 01:49:21.400] I'd like to take you up on that. [01:49:21.400 --> 01:49:22.400] Hold on, Jack. [01:49:22.400 --> 01:49:24.400] I'm having a terrible time understanding you. [01:49:24.400 --> 01:49:30.400] Are you on a hands-free device? [01:49:30.400 --> 01:49:35.400] No, I just have terrible Internet. [01:49:35.400 --> 01:49:38.400] I think he said he has terrible Internet. [01:49:38.400 --> 01:49:40.400] Oh, OK. [01:49:40.400 --> 01:49:48.400] Go up and stand on the very top of the house and hold your phone up in the air. [01:49:48.400 --> 01:49:50.400] Or not. [01:49:50.400 --> 01:49:55.400] We had a guy that used to hang from a water tower to get a signal. [01:49:55.400 --> 01:50:00.400] Just try speaking more slowly so that when it cuts out, it doesn't get entire words. [01:50:00.400 --> 01:50:04.400] We'll see if we can understand you. [01:50:04.400 --> 01:50:07.400] I'm sorry about that. [01:50:07.400 --> 01:50:11.400] I'm a little bit confused and a couple of things. [01:50:11.400 --> 01:50:22.400] I'd like to become a professional litigator like you're talking about and like the Roller Four. [01:50:22.400 --> 01:50:31.400] And I have a little question about when you sue somebody, like you were talking earlier, [01:50:31.400 --> 01:50:34.400] you touched on it a little bit. [01:50:34.400 --> 01:50:47.400] If you sue them in their personal capacity, they are not covered by the bond, the official bond. [01:50:47.400 --> 01:50:48.400] OK, hold on. [01:50:48.400 --> 01:50:50.400] They're covered by their bond. [01:50:50.400 --> 01:50:52.400] If they have a bond. [01:50:52.400 --> 01:50:53.400] OK, no, hold on. [01:50:53.400 --> 01:50:59.400] I didn't speak to that, but it is a good point. [01:50:59.400 --> 01:51:03.400] They are covered if I sued them in their professional capacity. [01:51:03.400 --> 01:51:13.400] And what I was referring to there is I'm trying to push these judges to think I'm going to get them outside their [01:51:13.400 --> 01:51:18.400] professional capacity so that their bonds won't apply to them. [01:51:18.400 --> 01:51:20.400] They have to dig in their own pocket. [01:51:20.400 --> 01:51:32.400] So I'm going to want them to go to whoever they have to go to in the state to get a deal made before they get sued personally. [01:51:32.400 --> 01:51:43.400] So if they can get the state to agree to indemnify them, I don't know how that would work. [01:51:43.400 --> 01:51:54.400] I would think if I was the insurance company and I held the bond for these judges, I would say heck no. [01:51:54.400 --> 01:52:04.400] It may take the legislature to get this to get a deal paid. [01:52:04.400 --> 01:52:15.400] If I sue them in their official capacity or if I sue the organization they work for, like if I sue a city judge, [01:52:15.400 --> 01:52:24.400] then I can also sue the city. And there are times when the city won't have immunity. [01:52:24.400 --> 01:52:34.400] And as I do these suits, I'm going to work up a set of templates for when you can get at each one of them and how to set them up for it. [01:52:34.400 --> 01:52:43.400] But I don't have all that done yet. Here, I am actually kind of in a quandary. [01:52:43.400 --> 01:52:55.400] I've got the judges over the barrel. So do I have them so far over the barrel they can't get back? [01:52:55.400 --> 01:53:04.400] Or can the state step in somehow and indemnify them? [01:53:04.400 --> 01:53:16.400] If the state steps in and indemnifies them, technically they can't. But if they try to and want to write me a check for several million dollars, [01:53:16.400 --> 01:53:19.400] I'm not going to complain about it. [01:53:19.400 --> 01:53:29.400] How can you communicate that to them since you've so far communicated to them that you're going to hold them accountable for trying to misappropriate public funds? [01:53:29.400 --> 01:53:42.400] Well, I'm going to ask them to give me records of all of their bonding and insurance. [01:53:42.400 --> 01:54:02.400] So that tells them that I'm going to want to make a claim under the Stowers Doctrine or I'll put the reference to the Stowers Doctrine in there. So that tells them that if they want the insurance to pay, I'm not going to complain about it. [01:54:02.400 --> 01:54:14.400] But that is a question that I don't have researched out yet. It's kind of obscure. [01:54:14.400 --> 01:54:22.400] I'll have to get to that. And that's why I want to do a number of these suits. I've got this first one going and then I'm going to do another one in the county I live in. [01:54:22.400 --> 01:54:34.400] And then I'm going to want to do one down in Victoria. By the time we get to Victoria, I'll have all this sorted out. But as to the bonds, I'm not certain how that's going to work yet. [01:54:34.400 --> 01:54:44.400] I know they have heard of the legislature convening a session to authorize payment on a lawsuit. [01:54:44.400 --> 01:54:59.400] But whether they have power to do that and indemnify these judges, I suppose the legislature could know that's going to violate the Constitution. [01:54:59.400 --> 01:55:09.400] I may have backed myself in a corner where I have to take their bass boat. [01:55:09.400 --> 01:55:19.400] That's a good deal anyway. Yes, good. It'll get the ultimate purpose handled. [01:55:19.400 --> 01:55:43.400] So okay, go ahead. The stower's doctrine, you mentioned it and that was my next question. Because if you see them in the purse of capacity and they're not covered by the official city bond company, then you can't really do the stores. [01:55:43.400 --> 01:55:59.400] I know that's why I was going to mention the stower's doctrine because I'm saying to them, if I know about the stores doctrine, then I also know that I sued them in their personal capacity. [01:55:59.400 --> 01:56:05.400] And in which case they would have to have their own personal insurance. [01:56:05.400 --> 01:56:13.400] I wonder if I could get them under their homeowners insurance. [01:56:13.400 --> 01:56:15.400] I doubt it. [01:56:15.400 --> 01:56:17.400] Probably not. That's interesting. [01:56:17.400 --> 01:56:19.400] Homeowners insurance. [01:56:19.400 --> 01:56:36.400] It goes to a lot of stuff. But I'll let them figure that out. But I'm telling them that I want to know what their insurance is because if they want to make me an offer, I'm going to take the offer. [01:56:36.400 --> 01:56:41.400] So let them make me an illegal offer. [01:56:41.400 --> 01:56:51.400] I'm going to take it as long as it's big enough. [01:56:51.400 --> 01:56:53.400] I have one more question. [01:56:53.400 --> 01:56:55.400] If we have time. [01:56:55.400 --> 01:56:56.400] Two minutes. [01:56:56.400 --> 01:57:16.400] So how do I know how much time I have? And when does the clock start where I can sue? Is it when they wrote me the traffic ticket or when they dismissed the traffic ticket or when they... [01:57:16.400 --> 01:57:22.400] When they dismiss the traffic ticket. [01:57:22.400 --> 01:57:25.400] Okay. And how much time do I have? [01:57:25.400 --> 01:57:28.400] The first imprisonment is one year. [01:57:28.400 --> 01:57:34.400] If you sue them for ongoing criminal enterprise, there is no statute of limitations. [01:57:34.400 --> 01:57:37.400] And that's the way I suggest you do it. [01:57:37.400 --> 01:57:59.400] The federal court for ongoing criminal enterprise calculate how much the state or how much they make annually in traffic tickets and sue them for the last 10 years. [01:57:59.400 --> 01:58:09.400] It doesn't matter how you get the number. You just have to be able to show them this is how I got that number. [01:58:09.400 --> 01:58:19.400] Let them argue that it's too high. If you ask for $10, you're going to say it's too high. So ask for $10 million. [01:58:19.400 --> 01:58:31.400] Alright, good. So basically I have plenty of time to figure out how to sue in federal court, right? Yeah, we can sue them for an ongoing criminal enterprise. [01:58:31.400 --> 01:58:36.400] And that's ongoing. So there is no time for that. [01:58:36.400 --> 01:58:39.400] Alright, that's okay. Great. [01:58:39.400 --> 01:58:45.400] Okay, we are out of time. Thank you all for listening. We'll be back tomorrow night on our four hour info marathon. [01:58:45.400 --> 01:58:50.400] Thank you all and good night. [01:59:16.400 --> 01:59:20.400] or visit us online at bfa.org [01:59:20.400 --> 01:59:29.400] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.400 --> 01:59:32.400] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.400 --> 01:59:40.400] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.400 --> 01:59:49.400] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org [01:59:49.400 --> 02:00:11.400] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com